• DAY2 ENHANCED RISK Areas

    From Dumas Walker@1337:3/103 to All on Saturday, March 29, 2025 07:56:00
    ACUS02 KWNS 290616
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 290615

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0115 AM CDT Sat Mar 29 2025

    Valid 301200Z - 311200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS A BROAD
    AREA CENTERED OVER THE OHIO/MID MISSISSIPPI/TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A widespread/substantial severe-weather episode is forecast across
    an area centered on the Ohio/Mid and Lower Mississippi/Lower
    Missouri/Tennessee River Valleys. Very large hail, damaging winds,
    and strong tornadoes are expected.

    ...Midwest/Ohio Valley south to East Texas and the central Gulf
    Coast states...

    A mid-level short-wave trough is forecast to shift northeastward out
    of the central Plains into the Upper Great Lakes region through the
    first half of the period, with an accompanying surface low deepening
    slowly as it reaches the Lake Michigan vicinity by early evening.
    Meanwhile, a secondary short-wave trough -- comporised of several
    vorticity maxima -- is forecast to move into/across the central and
    southern Plains toward the Mississippi Valley through the second
    half of the period, possibly driving weak frontal wave development
    in the mid Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley vicinity by evening.

    As the cold front crosses western Illinois/Missouri during the day,
    daytime heating will support destabilization, yielding scattered
    thunderstorm development, as the main/initial short-wave trough
    crosses this region. Large hail and damaging winds will become
    increasingly likely as the storms organize, and a few tornadoes will
    also be possible. This convection may evolve into one or more bands
    of organized storms with embedded rotation, with risk for more
    widespread strong/damaging gusts, in addition to embedded tornadoes,
    as the convection shifts across Indiana/southern Lower Michigan, and
    eventually western Ohio through the evening and into the overnight hours.

    Farther south, more uncertainty exists -- due to questions regarding
    degree of cloudiness and precipitation ahead of the approaching
    front. NAM output suggests very steep lapse rates aloft will
    overspread the area atop a capped/amply moist boundary layer. As
    the front approaches, and effects of the secondary upper troughing
    impinge gradually on the Lower Mississippi Valley area -- and
    eventually the Mid South/Tennessee Valley, developing storms would
    pose substantial, all-hazards severe risk including very large hail, strong/damaging winds, and potentially strong tornadoes.

    However, some models -- particularly the RAP -- suggest that
    widespread precipitation/weak convection will persist through much
    of the period across the lower Ohio/lower Mississippi/Tennessee
    Valleys through the first half of the period, substantially
    affecting the thermodynamic environment. Along with a
    less-amplified upper flow field -- and weaker shear overall --
    enough uncertainty exists to refrain from a higher-end outlook at
    this time. As such, will maintain ENH risk across a broad area at
    this time, though an upgrade to MDT risk in the lower
    Ohio/Tennessee/Mid Mississippi Valley corridor may be required in
    later outlooks.

    ..Goss.. 03/29/2025

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1337:3/103)