• DAY1 ENHANCED RISK OK/KS

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Tue Apr 1 07:44:00 2025
    ACUS01 KWNS 010539
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 010538

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1238 AM CDT Tue Apr 01 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS LATE THIS
    EVENING ACROSS PARTS OF NORTH CENTRAL OKLAHOMA INTO SOUTH CENTRAL KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Rapid, intense thunderstorm development is possible this evening
    across parts of the central and southern Great Plains. A few
    supercells posing a risk for large hail and a couple of strong
    tornadoes are possible, particularly across parts of north central
    Oklahoma into south central Kansas.

    ...Discussion...
    Amplification of mid/upper flow across the southern mid-latitudes of
    the eastern Pacific into western North America appears underway,
    with a seasonably strong cyclonic jet now digging inland of the central/southern California coast. An initially significant
    mid-level low within the large-scale troughing to the north of this
    feature appears to be in the process of devolving into at least a
    couple of significant short wave perturbations as it progresses
    inland of the northern Pacific coast.

    Models indicate that the lead perturbation will progress across the
    Rockies into the Great Plains today through tonight, and contribute
    to significant lower/mid-tropospheric cyclogenesis over the north
    central Great Plains through middle Missouri Valley by 12Z
    Wednesday. A notable trailing perturbation is forecast to dig
    inland of the Pacific coast, near and west of the Sierra Nevada.

    Given the forecast synoptic pattern evolution, and intensifying
    lower/mid tropospheric wind fields (including 50-70+ kt southerly
    around 850 mb and 90-100+ kt southwesterly) across the south central
    Great Plains into lower Missouri Valley late this evening through
    early Wednesday, the environment would seem at least conditionally
    supportive of an outbreak of severe thunderstorms. However,
    low-level moisture return, in the wake of a still ongoing intrusion
    of cool/dry air to the east of the Rockies, remains a source of
    uncertainty, and a potentially limiting factor, concerning the risk
    for severe thunderstorms today through tonight.

    ...Great Plains into portions of the Upper Midwest...

    An initial narrow plume of low-level moisture return appears
    underway up the Rio Grande Valley toward the Texas South Plains.
    However, models continue to indicate that boundary-layer moistening, characterized by lower/mid 60s surface dew points, may not begin
    advecting to the north of the Red River until late afternoon. Even
    so, there appears potential for this moisture to rapidly advect
    northward, within deepening surface troughing, across parts of
    western and central Oklahoma into central Kansas through late evening.

    In the presence of steep lapse rates, it appears that there may be
    sufficient destabilization to support the initiation of widely
    scattered thunderstorm development near the sharpening dryline, from
    parts of west central Kansas into the Texas Edwards Plateau vicinity
    by late afternoon. Strongest storms probably will be focused across
    parts of southwestern Oklahoma into portions of the Texas South
    Plains, where the environment may become conducive to the evolution
    of supercells, though substantial mid-level inhibition may tend to
    limit eastward propagation away from the dryline.

    The most significant convective development still seems most
    probable during the mid to late evening, in association with the
    better low-level moisture return and destabilization, which is
    forecast to coincide with the substantive intensification of the
    wind fields in the 850-500 mb layer across the Texas/Oklahoma
    Panhandle vicinity through southern Kansas/northern Oklahoma. This
    may focus near/east-northeast of a developing triple point low,
    generally forecast to track by a number of models across
    northwestern Oklahoma through south central Kansas during the
    02/03-06Z time frame.

    Although the extent of upscale convective growth across this region
    remains unclear, the environment appears conducive at least to the
    evolution of several discrete supercells. These may be accompanied
    by large hail initially, and increasing tornadic potential in the
    presence of enlarging low-level hodographs and a moistening boundary
    layer across and northeast of the I-35 corridor.

    It is possible that elevated moisture return and destabilization
    could be sufficient to support a risk for thunderstorms capable of
    producing severe hail as far northeast as portions of the Upper
    Midwest by late tonight.

    ...Interior Valley of central California...

    Beneath cold air and an associated cyclonic vorticity center
    forecast to overspread the region late this afternoon, it appears
    that the environment could become conducive to an isolated strong
    storm or two, which gust pose a risk for small hail, gusty winds and
    perhaps a brief tornado or two.

    ..Kerr/Weinman.. 04/01/2025

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (21:1/175)