• ENHANCED RISK - Texas

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Thursday, May 16, 2024 07:58:00
    ACUS01 KWNS 160549
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 160547

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1247 AM CDT Thu May 16 2024

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS LATE THIS
    AFTERNOON AND EVENING ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL AND SOUTHEAST TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms posing a risk for severe hail and wind may become
    fairly numerous across parts of central and southeastern Texas this
    afternoon into tonight. A couple of tornadoes are also possible,
    and an organized cluster of storms might eventually evolve by late
    evening, accompanied by a more substantive risk for damaging wind
    gusts.

    ...Synopsis...
    Seasonably high moisture content has generally become suppressed
    offshore of the southern Atlantic Seaboard through the central Gulf
    of Mexico and lower Rio Grande Valley, in the wake of a surface
    cyclone now centered offshore of the northern Mid Atlantic Coast.
    The cyclone is forecast to weaken and migrate away from the coast,
    as associated large-scale mid/upper troughing progresses east of the
    Atlantic Seaboard through early Friday. As this occurs, and
    similar magnitude mid/upper troughing (at least initially) emerges
    from the Southwest, low-level moisture appears likely to surge
    northeast of the lower Rio Grande Valley toward the lower
    Mississippi Valley.

    Models do suggest that the Southwestern trough may progress
    east-northeastward in somewhat piece-meal fashion, with perhaps one
    notable perturbation accelerating across the Permian Basin by this
    evening, preceded by one or two more subtle impulses. Each will
    tend to suppress mid/upper ridging now present across the southern
    Great Plains, and may be accompanied by a substantive wave of
    convective development. However, the details of the potential
    conglomerate convective evolution remain unclear, and convection
    allowing model output is varied.

    ...Texas...
    While the influence of early period convection and associated
    outflow on the low-level environment remains uncertain, model output
    is suggestive that a fairly well-defined lower/mid-tropospheric
    baroclinic zone (around 700 mb) may provide the primary focus for
    stronger convective development during this period. In the wake of
    at least one initial short wave perturbation, and in advance of the
    more prominent one, this will likely demarcate the northern
    periphery of the warmer and more strongly capping elevated
    mixed-layer air. By late this afternoon, it is possible that a zone
    of differential surface heating may become better defined beneath
    this regime, from portions of the Pecos and Rio Grande Valleys into
    central Texas.

    Along and south of this zone, it appears that mixed-layer CAPE will
    become large (on the order of 2000-4000 J/kg), beneath seasonably
    strong southwesterly upper flow. Deep-layer shear likely will be
    supportive of supercells, aided by veering with height of initially
    modest low-level wind fields which are forecast to strengthen by
    this evening across central into southeastern Texas.

    Large hail and locally damaging wind gusts appear the primary severe
    threat with initial eastward/southeastward propagating supercells by
    late afternoon. As low-level hodographs enlarge, the risk for a
    couple of tornadoes may increase by this evening in both lingering
    supercells and upscale growing convection. At least one prominent
    cluster may gradually evolve and organize across central into
    southeastern Texas by late this evening, accompanied by increasing
    potential for damaging wind gusts.

    ..Kerr/Squitieri.. 05/16/2024

    $$
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