• Enhanced Risk Great Plain

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Thu May 23 07:57:00 2024
    ACUS01 KWNS 230558
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 230556

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1256 AM CDT Thu May 23 2024

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE CENTRAL
    GREAT PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible across the Great Plains
    this afternoon into tonight, where a few tornadoes and isolated very
    large hail are probable. The most likely concentration of severe
    winds is expected across a portion of the central Great Plains this
    evening into tonight. Some of these should be significant from 75-85
    mph.

    ...Central to northern Great Plains...
    The most synoptically evident region for severe storms is expected
    downstream of a shortwave trough ejecting from the Northwest into
    the northern Great Plains through 12Z Friday. A lee cyclone
    initially between the Bighorns and Black Hills will track
    east-northeast towards the Upper Red River Valley. A dryline/lee
    trough will initially emerge eastward, before being progressively
    overtaken from north to south by an accelerating cold front,
    especially this evening into tonight.

    With 60+ F surface dew points currently confined to the Ozarks and
    the Upper Red River of the South, boundary-layer moisture quality
    will be limited and spatially confined through this afternoon.
    Nevertheless, pronounced surface heating, coupled with the favorable large-scale forcing for ascent, will favor scattered thunderstorms
    near the surface cyclone and adjacent warm front. Additional storms
    will develop south along the surface trough/cold front. Deep-layer
    shear will support several high-based supercells. Significant severe
    hail and isolated severe gusts should be the primary early threat.

    During the evening, most CAM guidance depicts upscale growth in the
    central to eastern NE vicinity. This should be favored by a
    strengthening low-level jet ahead of the increasingly convergent
    cold front, and earlier supercells impinging on the more buoyant air
    mass and broadening warm-moist sector advecting north. An
    east-southeast moving QLCS with embedded bows may emerge towards the
    Mid-MO Valley vicinity. This should yield potential for both
    significant severe wind and brief tornadoes. Guidance spread
    increases substantially with how long a severe MCS should persist
    overnight.

    ...Southern Great Plains...
    Outside of the dryline, large-scale ascent appears nebulous today.
    Isolated to scattered morning convection may persist/redevelop to
    the north of remnant outflow from central TX through the Mid-South.
    Greater differential heating across this corridor may provide a
    focus for sporadic thunderstorms downstream of the dryline. A belt
    of enhanced mid-level westerlies should persist across north to
    central TX through the afternoon. Large buoyancy with MLCAPE of
    2500-3500 J/kg should become common across OK through central TX
    ahead of the dryline. Have maintained level 2-SLGT risk where either
    residual outflow and dryline storms capable of all hazards appear
    possible.

    ...TN Valley to the coastal New England/Mid-Atlantic States...
    A broad swath of the eastern CONUS will have at least isolated
    potential for strong to locally severe storms. Much of this area
    will be characterized by weak to modest buoyancy (MLCAPE of 500-1500
    J/kg) and moderate deep-layer, but weak low-level shear. Convective enhancements will likely be tied to upstream MCVs, as well as along
    corridors of greater morning to afternoon insolation. Have
    maintained a large level 1-MRGL risk for both severe wind and hail.

    ..Grams/Barnes.. 05/23/2024

    $$
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