• ENHANCED RISK SOUTH US

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Thursday, May 09, 2024 08:44:00
    ACUS01 KWNS 091324
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 091323

    Day 1 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0823 AM CDT Thu May 09 2024

    Valid 091300Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM CENTRAL
    TEXAS TO PARTS OF THE GEORGIA/SOUTH CAROLINA COAST...

    CORRECTED FOR INCORRECT SLGT LABEL LOCATION

    ...SUMMARY...
    Very large hail with multiple supercells appears probable across
    parts of north and central Texas into the ArkLaTex vicinity this
    afternoon and evening -- including parts of the Dallas/Ft. Worth
    Metroplex. A broader corridor of severe hail and damaging-wind
    potential will extend from east Texas into the lower Mississippi
    Valley and Southeast.

    ...Synopsis...
    In mid/upper levels, an extraordinarily long, more than continent-
    spanning, positively tilted trough was apparent in moisture-channel
    imagery. The trough extended from an Atlantic cyclone south-
    southeast of Greenland, across Newfoundland/southern Labrador and
    southern parts of QC/ON, the Upper Great Lakes, upper Mississippi
    Valley, NE, the central Rockies, southern Great Basin, central CA,
    and west-southwestward over the Pacific. On the western segment of
    the trough, a remnant cyclone near FSD/YKN will dissipate shortly,
    while a closed vortex develops over UT and slowly retrogrades
    through the period. Meanwhile, weak shortwave troughs now over
    parts of MO/IA/IL will move eastward across the Ohio Valley region,
    in advance of a larger, amplifying shortwave trough now over Lake
    Superior and northeastern MN. A weak, but still potentially
    influential southern stream shortwave will move east-northeastward
    from southwest to central TX today. Picking up some convective
    vorticity and related amplification, this perturbation should
    accelerate eastward and reach parts of AL by 12Z tomorrow.

    At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a diffuse frontal-wave low over
    central IL, with quasistationary to locally warm front eastward
    across central/southern OH to northern WV. A cold front extended
    from the low across southern IL to eastern AR, becoming wavy/
    quasistationary through a weak low south of ABI, then cold again
    into the Big Bend region. This front, overall, will sag southward
    across TX through the period, but hang up for much of the day ahead
    of the low and around the DFW/SEP region, and across the Edwards
    Plateau. The Ohio Valley low is expected to move eastward to near
    the southwestern corner of PA by 00Z, then move/redevelop eastward
    across VA to near the Delmarva Atlantic Coast by the end of the
    period.

    ...North, central and east TX...
    At least a few supercells are expected to erupt in a high-
    instability environment this afternoon, along and southeast of the
    front. This activity will be capable of large hail -- some of it
    potentially 3+ inches in diameter -- as well as locally severe gusts
    and perhaps a tornado or two. The threat area includes the DFW
    Metroplex -- unfortunately, no stranger to swaths of destructive
    hail -- and areas southward/eastward into the Hill Country, I-35/45
    corridors and Piney Woods.

    The airmass across the region begins the day quite moist, with
    surface dewpoints commonly in the low/mid 70s just southeast of the
    front, and mid/upper 70s over the Gulf Coastal Plain. Steep
    midlevel lapse rates, related to an EML, were sampled by 12Z RAOBs
    at MAF and FWD. This airmass aloft will remain over the region,
    with some subtle/reinforcing large-scale ascent possible ahead of
    the southern-stream perturbation. Meanwhile, the boundary layer
    should destabilize amidst strong diurnal heating, causing the cap to
    weaken considerably through early/mid afternoon. Development is
    possible as soon as late morning to midday near the front, over the
    Edwards Plateau, and midday to mid afternoon farther north near the
    low. By then, 3500-4500 J/kg MLCAPE should be common, locally near
    5000 J/kg. Low-level flow should remain weak, but with enough
    easterly component southeast of the front to foster strong veering
    with height and long (sometimes nearly straight) hodographs. This
    will support splitting storms, with both left- and right-moving
    supercells offering the threat for significant (2+ inch) hail.
    Sustained storms could produce 3-4-inch hailstones, based on
    historic analogs and a 2D hail model applied to forecast soundings.

    With a deep troposphere and abundant inflow-layer moisture, deeply precip-loaded downdrafts are possible, with some midlevel momentum
    augmentation and related severe-gust potential. The wind threat
    could evolve upscale and start forward-propagating eastward into LA
    wherever early cells can aggregate into clusters. The supercell
    tornado threat is conditional, mainly dependent on local storm-scale
    processes such as mergers and boundary interactions. QLCS tornadoes
    are also possible with any MCS.

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley to southern Atlantic Coast...
    Ongoing, organized areas of thunderstorms over the Southeast,
    interacting with and focused astride baroclinic/instability
    gradients from outflow boundaries, will continue to offer damaging
    wind, a few tornadoes, and isolated severe hail through at least
    midday as they move across parts of northern MS, AL, territory eastward/southeastward toward the GA/SC coast, and perhaps northern
    FL. For near-term concerns, refer to tornado watches 215-216 and
    related mesoscale discussions.

    The related outflow/baroclinic gradient should serve as a focus for
    forward propagation, and perhaps initiation, of thunderstorms this
    afternoon into tonight. Surface dewpoints commonly in the 70s F and
    strong diurnal heating south and west of the outflow boundaries will
    contribute to peak afternoon MLCAPE of 3500-4500 J/kg, only slowly
    diminishing through the evening and overnight hours. Given the very
    richly moist and favorable unstable environment in place, beneath parallel-oriented midlevel flow, one or two organized MCSs may
    result. A conditional derecho potential exists, depending on timing
    and location of upscale organization within this corridor. If a
    complex moves out of east TX, or develops far enough west in MS/LA
    and is sustained all the way across the remainder of the Gulf Coast
    States tonight, either readily could qualify.

    One factor that may limit overall wind potential is the gradual
    nocturnal stabilizing of the boundary layer. However, sufficient
    cold-pool organization, rear-inflow-jet development and forced
    ascent of the still-favorably moist air may produce enough of a
    vertical circulation throughout an MCS to overcome the nocturnal
    influence. At this time, too many mesoscale uncertainties remain to
    insert an unconditional 45%/MDT wind corridor, but that may need to
    be done in a succeeding outlook if convective guidance comes into
    better agreement and/or mesoscale trends warrant. A few tornadoes
    also may occur, especially near the outflow boundaries where
    low-level vorticity/shear will be maximized.

    ...Mid/upper Ohio Valley to Tidewater...
    Scattered to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible today
    across parts of the Ohio Valley region, with damaging to isolated
    severe gusts and marginally severe hail possible. Activity should
    occur in an environment characterized by steepening midlevel lapse
    rates ahead of the ejecting MO/IA/IL perturbations, modest
    convergence near and ahead of the surface low, adequate near-surface
    moisture with dewpoints in the 50s to mid 60s, and modest diurnal
    heating. MLCAPE up to the 1000-1500 J/kg range is possible. Though
    upper flow will be strong, nearly unidirectional profiles and lack
    of greater midlevel winds should keep effective-shear magnitudes in
    the 30-40 kt range over much of the area.

    Farther east/southeast, cool/stable air north of a damming/preceding
    frontal zone across VA and the Delmarva should limit the northern
    end of severe potential. Destabilization and available moisture
    will be substantially limited today in the nominal warm sector,
    between the damming front and a great deal of MCS/outflow activity
    to the south over the Carolinas/GA. Therefore, while thunderstorms
    are possible this afternoon near the max temperature hours, and deep
    shear may be adequate for a few organized cells, severe potential
    appears isolated and marginal at best. As such, severe
    probabilities over much of the region have been reduced.

    ..Edwards.. 05/09/2024

    $$
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