thunderman Posted February 15, 2013 Share Posted February 15, 2013 The area of low pressure that we are all watching for winter weather possibilities next towards next weekend, looks as if it may have quite the significant severe weather side as well on Thursday. The area of interest will be from east Texas into Dixie Alley. As we saw with the last event on Sunday, there looks to be a small area of sufficient moisture return along and ahead of the front across LA, MS, AL, southern AR, and east TX. This area of better moisture/theta-e looks to also be co-located with 50+ knts of mid/upper level shear with surface winds containing an easterly component … yielding large and open hodographs. It still remains to be seen how much forcing we get into this area. If storms can manage to stay semi-discrete and surface based then we could be looking at another round of tornadoes … with strong to violent tornadoes in the cards. Definitely need to keep an eye on this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed Lizard Posted February 16, 2013 Share Posted February 16, 2013 Just looking at AccuWx PPV (and have looked at GFS products), lots of wind energy, apparently 'meh' lapse rates and temps struggling to reach 70. Euro CAPE near or below 500 J/Kg in the South. Maybe that would be enough with the wind... I didn't have time to capture 12Z GFS, I tried to catch a sounding just ahead of the precip/windshift in Alabama last night. At least 12Z Euro forecast sounding isn't saturated to 150 mb like this. I will say, 55 knots around 900 mb, I'd guess heavy rain could produce severe gusts. Hoping 17 dropsondes in Pacific this after noon make 0Z guidance. And this is as good as it gets on 18Z GFS. Seems 70-90 knots of 0-500 mb shear goes unutilized, except I've seen people before say GFS underestimated instability, especially this far out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 16, 2013 Share Posted February 16, 2013 That's also at 06z in the morning, Ed. Even so, with the GFS soundings saturated up to 150 mb (which is nonsense), of course the instability outputs are going to take a hit. The 12z Euro actually showed almost 1500 J/kg, nudging into MS on Thursday afternoon/evening, upon looking at Wundermaps. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stebo Posted February 16, 2013 Share Posted February 16, 2013 A few things, that sounding you posted ED is unrealistically moist. I don't buy for a second that the sounding is going to be moist to 150mb. Plus the map is for 06z, the risk area is back to the West and would me centered around 00z. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Disc Posted February 16, 2013 Share Posted February 16, 2013 150hrs, but still pretty darn impressive. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed Lizard Posted February 16, 2013 Share Posted February 16, 2013 A few things, that sounding you posted ED is unrealistically moist. I don't buy for a second that the sounding is going to be moist to 150mb. Plus the map is for 06z, the risk area is back to the West and would me centered around 00z. I looped that Twister data CAPE, and that really was the best it got. Looking at new GFS soundings, Friday 0Z (Thursday evening) surface temps in Northern Alabama and Tennesee near/below 15C despite Southerly winds. BNA in the 40sF. Even South Alabama looks cool (MOB, DHN). Didn't say I believe in a saturated profile to 150 mb. Or that GFS surface temps would be correct. On Euro, not sure why AccuPx and Wundermaps are different, unless one is surface or mixed layer, and the other is most unstable. AccuWx PPV maps leave something to be desired in the labeling. I should figure out the Wundermaps, looks like 3 hour time steps on Euro... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 16, 2013 Share Posted February 16, 2013 DAY 4-8 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 0354 AM CST SAT FEB 16 2013 VALID 191200Z - 241200Z ...DISCUSSION... THE LATEST MEDIUM RANGE MODELS AND MODEL ENSEMBLES REMAIN FAIRLY CONSISTENT WITH RUNS OVER THE PAST SEVERAL DAYS...PARTICULARLY WITH REGARD TO A STRONG SHORT WAVE IMPULSE THAT APPEARS LIKELY TO DIG INTO THE CALIFORNIA COAST EARLY NEXT WEEK. A DEEP MID-LEVEL CLOSED LOW MAY EVOLVE AS THE IMPULSE MIGRATES INLAND...BUT IT IS EXPECTED TO REMAIN PROGRESSIVE...AS ANOTHER IMPULSE EMERGES FROM THE STRONG UPSTREAM MID-LATITUDE PACIFIC JET...AND APPROACHES THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST COAST BY MID WEEK. IN ASSOCIATION WITH THE LEAD SYSTEM...WHICH STILL APPEARS LIKELY TO LIFT EAST NORTHEAST OF THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES THROUGH THE CENTRAL PLAINS/MID MISSOURI VALLEY REGION LATE WEDNESDAY NIGHT THROUGH EARLY THURSDAY EVENING...SIGNIFICANT SURFACE CYCLOGENESIS APPEARS LIKELY ACROSS THE CENTRAL PLAINS. THIS MAY BE ACCOMPANIED BY INCREASING CONVECTIVE POTENTIAL...INCLUDING AT LEAST SOME RISK FOR SEVERE STORMS...ACROSS PARTS OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS LATE WEDNESDAY/WEDNESDAY NIGHT. HOWEVER...IT STILL APPEARS MOST PROBABLE THAT SEVERE WEATHER POTENTIAL WITH THIS SYSTEM WILL BECOME MAXIMIZED ON THURSDAY...AS DAYTIME HEATING CONTRIBUTES TO DESTABILIZATION...AND RETURN FLOW CONTINUES OFF AN INCREASINGLY MOIST BOUNDARY LAYER OVER THE GULF OF MEXICO. AS THIS MOISTURE OVERRUNS A RESIDUAL COOL/STABLE BOUNDARY LAYER LINGERING OVER PARTS OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND SOUTHEAST ...THE MOIST/UNSTABLE WARM SECTOR BOUNDARY LAYER MAY NOT BECOME PARTICULARLY BROAD. BUT IT IS EXPECTED TO BECOME SIZABLE ENOUGH TO SUPPORT A SIGNIFICANT RISK FOR SEVERE STORMS...AT LEAST ON THE SOUTHERN FRINGE ON THE MORE STRONGLY DIFLUENT HIGH-LEVEL FLOW... AND MID-LEVEL HEIGHT FALLS...ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY THURSDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING. THIS MAY INCLUDE THE RISK FOR SUPERCELLS WITH A FEW TORNADOES. ..KERR.. 02/16/2013 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 17, 2013 Share Posted February 17, 2013 DAY 4-8 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK 0347 AM CST SUN FEB 17 2013 VALID 201200Z - 251200Z ...DISCUSSION... THE LATEST MEDIUM RANGE FORECAST GUIDANCE MAINTAINS GENERAL TRENDS OF THE PAST SEVERAL DAYS CONCERNING A MAJOR UPPER TROUGH AND ASSOCIATED STRONG JET STREAK THAT APPEAR LIKELY TO EMERGE FROM THE SOUTHWESTERN U.S. BY THE MIDDLE OF THE COMING WORK WEEK. THE TROUGH AXIS STILL APPEARS LIKELY TO TAKE ON A NEGATIVE TILT AS IT PROGRESSES ACROSS THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES INTO THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS BY 12Z THURSDAY...BEFORE LIFTING NORTHEASTWARD AND DEAMPLIFYING ACROSS THE UPPER MIDWEST ON FRIDAY. PRIMARY SURFACE CYCLOGENESIS IS EXPECTED ACROSS EASTERN COLORADO INTO WESTERN KANSAS...BUT MODELS INDICATE SECONDARY WAVE DEVELOPMENT FROM PARTS OF NORTHWEST INTO EASTERN TEXAS WEDNESDAY NIGHT. THIS MAY EVENTUALLY BECOME THE FOCUS FOR AN EVOLVING SQUALL LINE...AND INCREASING SEVERE WEATHER POTENTIAL...AS FORCING ENCOUNTERS BETTER MOISTURE RETURN OFF THE GULF OF MEXICO. HIGHEST SEVERE PROBABILITIES STILL APPEAR TO EXIST ON THURSDAY...AS THE WAVE AND ASSOCIATED SQUALL LINE DEVELOP EASTWARD ALONG A WARM FRONT ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY. SURFACE DEW POINTS IN THE WARM SECTOR OF THE WAVE MAY REACH THE MID 60S ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEAST TEXAS INTO SOUTHERN LOUISIANA AND MISSISSIPPI. ASSOCIATED BOUNDARY LAYER DESTABILIZATION ON THE SOUTHERN PERIPHERY OF THE DIFLUENT HIGH LEVEL FLOW AND MID-LEVEL HEIGHT FALLS COULD BECOME SUPPORTIVE OF DISCRETE SUPERCELLS NEAR/AHEAD OF THE SQUALL LINE... WITH A RISK FOR TORNADOES...IN ADDITION TO DAMAGING WIND GUSTS. ..KERR.. 02/17/2013 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Srain Posted February 17, 2013 Share Posted February 17, 2013 It looks like we will get some additional RECON from Hawaii from the G-IV. WEATHER RECONNAISSANCE FLIGHTSCARCAH, NATIONAL HURRICANE CENTER, MIAMI, FL.1230 PM EST SUN 17 FEBRUARY 2013SUBJECT: WINTER STORM PLAN OF THE DAY (WSPOD) VALID 18/1100Z TO 19/1100Z FEBRUARY 2013 WSPOD NUMBER.....12-079I. ATLANTIC REQUIREMENTS 1. NEGATIVE RECONNAISSANCE REQUIREMENTS. 2. OUTLOOK FOR SUCCEEDING DAY.....NEGATIVE.II. PACIFIC REQUIREMENTS 1. FLIGHT ONE -- NOAA 49 A. P52/ DROP 10 (22.3N 129.0W)/ 19/0000Z B. NOAA9 13WSC TRACK52 C. 18/1930Z D. 19 DROPS AS PUBLISHED ON TRACK E. 41,000 TO 45,000 FT/ 19/0600Z 2. OUTLOOK FOR SUCCEEDING DAY: POSSIBLE P53/ DROP 9 (15.5N 131.8W)/ 20/0000Z Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
My Weather Today Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 Someone needs to correct the title of this thread. It's says Jan 21st threat. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stebo Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 Someone needs to correct the title of this thread. It's says Jan 21st threat. Yeah it is for the 21st, the day 4 potential. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Srain Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 Added the 20th to account for the Day 3 Slight Risk for portions of Central/North Texas. There is some uncertainty on the evolution of the late Wednesday potential. The WSR missions that will fly tonight and tomorrow E of Hawaii should offer some stability via the short term meso guidance. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bryan Wood Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 Yeah it is for the 21st, the day 4 potential. But it is February unless we hit a Time Warp. The title says January. As far as the discussion of a possible lack of CAPE, we've seen destructive tornadoes in Dixie Alley with 250-500 SBCAPE before...high shear and boundaries can be a big deal in cold season storms here. You won't see much in the way of destructive hail, but it's not unusual to see supercells dropping tornadoes with low CAPE. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stebo Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 But it is February unless we hit a Time Warp. The title says January. As far as the discussion of a possible lack of CAPE, we've seen destructive tornadoes in Dixie Alley with 250-500 SBCAPE before...high shear and boundaries can be a big deal in cold season storms here. You won't see much in the way of destructive hail, but it's not unusual to see supercells dropping tornadoes with low CAPE. Ahh yeah good point, it is labelled with the wrong month. Lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed Lizard Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 Early start in Northern Houston Suburbs. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Srain Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 E-mail update from Jeff: Strong to severe thunderstorms have develop early this afternoon over Montgomery and San Jacinto Counties with tornado warnings ongoing on two separate cells. Activity appears associated with modest heating which has helped to break the mid level capping inversion and possible weak upper air disturbance noted on water vapor images over central TX. Expect activity will continue for the next few hours especially north of I-10 where capping is weakest, but will need to keep a close eye on cells over Fort Bend and NW Harris Counties as if they are able to break through the cap and utilize the strong lwo level shear in place they could become tornadic. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ed Lizard Posted February 18, 2013 Share Posted February 18, 2013 Several radar prompted tornado warnings in SW Arkansas, Lafayette county warned storm produced a funnel cloud near Lewisville. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 19, 2013 Share Posted February 19, 2013 Nice line of four discrete supercells tornado warned in the Arklatex. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Indystorm Posted February 19, 2013 Share Posted February 19, 2013 Those cells are impressive for what little dew points and CAPE we have in the area. Helicity is quite substantial. Does make me wonder what Thursday might hold if this system primes the pump. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thunderman Posted February 19, 2013 Author Share Posted February 19, 2013 Sorry about the month error! haha Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 19, 2013 Share Posted February 19, 2013 Those cells are impressive for what little dew points and CAPE we have in the area. Helicity is quite substantial. Does make me wonder what Thursday might hold if this system primes the pump. A wildcard here might be that sfc wave/possible sub-synoptic low developing north of the ST Jet axis that the D4 mentions. That may temporarily offset the occluding of the primary sfc low in the Plains and lead to locally enhanced low level shear and moisture advection. Considering the diffluent upper/mid level flow in that area (LA/MS), that would be something to watch. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chicago Storm Posted February 19, 2013 Share Posted February 19, 2013 Those cells are impressive for what little dew points and CAPE we have in the area. Helicity is quite substantial. The environment today wasn't that bad... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 19, 2013 Share Posted February 19, 2013 Well, the 00z Euro only trended a full state south with the primary surface low on Thursday at 72 hrs compared to last night. This has potentially significant implications as it allows the significant low level kinematics with the strong LLJ to remain firmly entrenched over the Lower MS Valley throughout the period. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 19, 2013 Share Posted February 19, 2013 DAY 3 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOKNWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK0226 AM CST TUE FEB 19 2013VALID 211200Z - 221200Z...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS THURSDAY ACROSS PARTS OFEASTERN TEXAS THRU THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY......SYNOPSIS...LARGE-SCALE UPPER TROUGHING FORECAST TO EVOLVE ACROSS MUCH OF THEWESTERN AND CENTRAL U.S. THE NEXT COUPLE OF DAYS IS EXPECTED TOPERSIST THROUGH THIS PERIOD AND BEYOND. THE MOST PROMINENT SHORTWAVE TROUGH EMBEDDED WITHIN THIS REGIME APPEARS LIKELY TO BE IN THEPROCESS OF LIFTING IN NEGATIVELY TILTED FASHION ACROSS THE CENTRALAND SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AT 12Z THURSDAY. MODELS SUGGEST THAT THISFEATURE WILL THEN CONTINUE PIVOTING AROUND AN ASSOCIATED DEEPLOW/MID-LEVEL CYCLONE MIGRATING FROM THE CENTRAL PLAINS TOWARD THEUPPER MIDWEST THROUGH EARLY FRIDAY. WHILE A STRONG MID/UPPER JETASSOCIATED WITH THIS FEATURE IS FORECAST IN A BROAD CYCLONIC BELTACROSS THE SOUTHERN PLAINS RED RIVER VALLEY/OZARK PLATEAU AND MIDDLEMISSISSIPPI VALLEY...A STRONG SUBTROPICAL JET IS EXPECTED TO PERSISTIN A BELT ACROSS THE LOWER RIO GRANDE VALLEY THROUGH THE GULF COASTVICINITY. WHILE MID-LEVEL HEIGHTS MAY RISE ALONG AN AXIS NORTH OFAN INCREASINGLY PROMINENT CARIBBEAN HIGH CENTER...GUIDANCE REMAINSSUGGESTIVE THAT THERE WILL BE AT LEAST WEAK MID-LEVEL HEIGHT FALLSACROSS THE CENTRAL GULF COAST/LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY REGION DURINGTHE DAY THURSDAY.IN MANY RESPECTS...THE FORECAST EVOLUTION OF THE LARGE-SCALE PATTERNREMAINS SIMILAR TO SOME THAT HAVE BEEN ASSOCIATED WITH CONSIDERABLESEVERE WEATHER POTENTIAL. HOWEVER...AN EXPANSIVE SURFACERIDGE...WHICH APPEARS LIKELY TO DEVELOP SOUTHEASTWARD IN THE WAKE OFTHE LARGE UPPER TROUGH NOW SHIFTING EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPIVALLEY...MAY MITIGATE THIS POTENTIAL. IT IS BECOMING MORE OBVIOUSTHAT A COOL/COLD AND STABLE SURFACE-BASED AIR MASS WILL BEENTRENCHED ACROSS MUCH OF THE EASTERN PLAINS AND MISSISSIPPI VALLEYEARLY THURSDAY...AND IT MAY PROVE SLOW TO MODIFY. MOST MODELSINDICATE THAT THE SUB 1000 MB SURFACE LOW OVER THE CENTRAL HIGHPLAINS AT 12Z THURSDAY WILL WEAKEN CONSIDERABLY AS IT REDEVELOPSNORTHEASTWARD THROUGH PARTS OF THE MIDDLE/LOWER MISSOURI VALLEY.AND SECONDARY WAVE DEVELOPMENT ALONG A SURFACE FRONT ACROSS CENTRALTEXAS PROBABLY WILL REMAIN WEAK AND WEAKEN AS IT TRACKS EASTNORTHEASTWARD ACROSS THE ARKLATEX AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY. STILL...MOISTENING AND DESTABILIZATION ABOVE THIS STABLE LAYERSHOULD BECOME SUPPORTIVE OF CONSIDERABLE THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY...ANDA WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY STILL APPEARS TO EXIST FOR SEVERE BOUNDARYLAYER BASED STORM DEVELOPMENT DURING THE DAY THURSDAY....LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...LATEST MODEL DATA...INCLUDING THE NAM/SREF AND ECMWF...DO INDICATERAPID BOUNDARY LAYER MOISTENING IS POSSIBLE BY MIDDAY THURSDAYACROSS AT LEAST MUCH OF LOUISIANA AND ADJACENT WESTCENTRAL/SOUTHWESTERN MISSISSIPPI. IT APPEARS PROBABLE THATPRECIPITABLE WATER WILL INCREASE UP TO AROUND 1.5 INCHES ACROSS THISREGION...AS SURFACE DEW POINTS INCREASE INTO THE MID 60S. THIS ISEXPECTED TO OCCUR BENEATH INITIALLY STEEP MID-LEVEL LAPSE RATES/700-500 MB IN EXCESS OF 8 DEGREES C PER KM/...WHICH MAY YIELD MIXEDLAYER CAPE OF 500-1000 J/KG BY EARLY AFTERNOON. IT IS BECOMING MOREUNCLEAR IF FORCING WILL MAINTAIN THE EASTWARD PROGRESSION OF APOTENTIALLY EVOLVING CLUSTER OF STORMS ACROSS THE REGION. THEENVIRONMENT MAY BE MORE CONDUCIVE TO DISCRETE STORM DEVELOPMENT...INTHE PRESENCE OF WIND PROFILES CHARACTERIZED BY STRONG DEEP LAYERSHEAR...AND LARGE CLOCKWISE CURVED LOW-LEVEL HODOGRAPHS. WHILEUNCERTAINTY MAY BE INCREASING A BIT...IT DOES NOT APPEAR COMPLETELYOUT OF THE QUESTION THAT PARAMETERS COULD COME IN PHASE TO SUPPORTONE OR TWO LONG LIVED SUPERCELLS CAPABLE OF PRODUCING STRONGTORNADOES ACROSS PARTS OF CENTRAL/SOUTHERN LOUISIANA INTOMISSISSIPPI...KERR.. 02/19/2013 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TropicalAnalystwx13 Posted February 19, 2013 Share Posted February 19, 2013 Hodographs are large and looping...depending on the amount of instability that develops, we may be looking at a good possibility of significant to violent tornadoes across central Louisiana on Thursday afternoon. Thermodynamics are not that indifferent from last week's system that produced the EF4 Hattiesburg tornado. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thunderman Posted February 19, 2013 Author Share Posted February 19, 2013 With the possibility of sufficient instability and the hodos being modeled, there seems to be a real possibility of long lived supercells with an inherent significant tornado risk ... should discrete convection get established.East-central LA Thursday evening: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
thunderman Posted February 19, 2013 Author Share Posted February 19, 2013 SREF Significant Tor Ingredients Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TropicalAnalystwx13 Posted February 20, 2013 Share Posted February 20, 2013 .DISCUSSION... SFC HIGH PRESSURE NEARLY OVHD THIS AFTN...WITH SFC LOW DEEPENING QUICKLY OVER PANHANDLES OVERNIGHT. DESPITE LIGHT EAST WINDS OVER EAST TX...BECMG GUSTIER TOWARDS CENTRAL TX...DEWPOINTS LOWER FURTHER WEST...WITH MAINLY UPPER TEENS TO LOWER 20S OVER CENTRAL TX. THEREFORE...DO NOT SEE REASON FOR DEWPOINTS TO INCREASE OVERNIGHT AND RADIATION COOLING TO OCCUR AT LEAST THRU MIDNIGHT...WITH SLOW ADVANCEMENT OF MID/UPPER LVL CLOUDS FROM WEST. SO HAVE LOWERED OVERNIGHT TEMPS A FEW DEGREES...RANGING THRU THE 30S FOR THE MOST PART. AS THESE HIGH BASED CLOUDS THICKEN...SOME LIGHT RAIN MAY OCCUR IN ISENTROPIC LIFT ACROSS MAINLY EAST TX TOWARDS DAYBREAK...AND EVAPORATIVE COOLING EFFECTS TO LIKELY OFFSET ANY WARMING FROM THE ARRIVAL OF THE CLOUD BLANKET. NORTHERN SECTIONS SHOULD SEE JUST ENOUGH WARM AIR NEAR SFC TO CONVERT ANY FRZN PCPN ALOFT TO LIQUID RAIN WED MORNING AND DAYTIME. AFTER THIS INITIAL LIGHT RAINFALL... SHOULD BE A BRIEF BREAK...BEFORE EMBEDDED CONVECTION BEGINS TO SPREAD ACROSS AREA WED NIGHT...IN ADVANCE OF WARM FRONT. LOW LVL SHEAR BECMG EXTREMELY STG WITH STG EASTERLY COMPONENT...BENEATH A 50 TO 60 KT SSW LOW LVL JET...RESULTING FROM INCREASING NEGATIVE TILTED TROUGH. QUESTION WILL BE HOW FAR NORTH AND EAST WARM FRONT ADVANCES...BEFORE SFC FEATURES WRAP AROUND ITSELF. THIS WILL DICTATE WHETHER WIDESPREAD HEAVY RAIN WITH EMBEDDED CONVECTION...OR POSSIBLE SIGNIFICANT TORNADO OUTBREAK...DURING THE DAY AND POSSIBLY INTO THE EVENING ON THURSDAY. A SERIES OF SHORT WAVES WITH MEAN LONG WAVE TROUGHING TO CONTINUE WESTERN CONUS TO KEEP COLD AIR OUT OF AREA. EXTENDED MODELS DIFFER ON TIMING AND LOCATION OF THESE SHORT WAVES. HAVE SOME LOW POPS IN EXTENDED./VII/. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 20, 2013 Share Posted February 20, 2013 You might want to reference which WFO put out that forecast discussion, in this case, it is SHV (Shreveport). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyhb Posted February 20, 2013 Share Posted February 20, 2013 DAY 2 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOKNWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK1148 PM CST TUE FEB 19 2013VALID 211200Z - 221200Z...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS THURSDAY ACROSS PARTS OFEASTERN TEXAS THRU THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY......SYNOPSIS...MUCH AS HAS BEEN FORECAST BY MODELS FOR THE BETTER PART OF THE LASTWEEK...THE EVOLUTION OF A LARGE-SCALE UPPER TROUGH IS NOW WELLUNDERWAY ACROSS THE PACIFIC COAST THROUGH THE ROCKIES...WITH ASTRONG SHORT WAVE IMPULSE DIGGING ACROSS CALIFORNIA...TOWARD THESOUTHERN INTERMOUNTAIN REGION. MODELS STILL INDICATE THAT THESMALLER SCALE TROUGH WILL TAKE ON AN INCREASING NEGATIVE TILT AS ITPROGRESSES EAST OF THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES BY 12ZTHURSDAY...ACCOMPANIED BY A 100 KT 500 MB JET STREAK. THE IMPULSEIS EXPECTED TO CONTINUE PIVOTING AROUND THE EASTERN PERIPHERY OF ANASSOCIATED DEEP LOWER/MID TROPOSPHERIC CYCLONE MIGRATING ACROSS THECENTRAL PLAINS...TOWARD THE UPPER MIDWEST...THROUGH THE REMAINDER OFTHIS PERIOD. THE SPEED MAXIMUM MAY WEAKEN...BUT STRONG CYCLONICMID/UPPER FLOW WILL PERSIST IN A BROAD BELT ACROSS THE SOUTHERNPLAINS THROUGH THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...WHILE A BROADLYANTICYCLONIC SUBTROPICAL JET CURVES ACROSS THE LOWER RIO GRANDVALLEY THROUGH THE GULF COAST VICINITY.GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO INDICATE THAT A COLD/STABLE AIR MASS...ASSOCIATED WITH AN ELONGATED SURFACE RIDGE EXTENDING ALONG AN AXISJUST EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AT THE START OF PERIOD...WILL BESLOW TO MODIFY. AND AN INITIALLY DEEP /SUB 1000 MB/ SURFACE CYCLONEASSOCIATED WITH THE UPPER IMPULSE APPEARS LIKELY TO WEAKEN AS ITMIGRATES NORTHEASTWARD OUT OF THE SOUTH CENTRAL PLAINS...TOWARD THEGREAT LAKES REGION. MODELS HAVE TRENDED FARTHER SOUTH WITH THELOCATION OF INITIAL CYCLOGENESIS...ACROSS NORTHEAST NEW MEXICO INTOTHE PANHANDLE REGION...BUT THEY REMAIN SUGGESTIVE OF AT LEAST WEAKSECONDARY WAVE DEVELOPMENT ALONG THE SURFACE FRONT ACROSS CENTRALTEXAS THROUGH THE ARKLATEX AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY.A 50-70 KT SOUTHERLY 850 MB JET APPEARS LIKELY TO EXTEND OFF THEWESTERN GULF OF MEXICO THROUGH EASTERN PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERNPLAINS EARLY THURSDAY. THIS WILL CONTRIBUTE TO MOISTENING ABOVE THESTABLE SURFACE-BASED LAYER...AND BENEATH STEEP LAPSE RATES...TOSUPPORT SUFFICIENT DESTABILIZATION FOR THUNDERSTORM ACTIVITY...AS ITSHIFTS EASTWARD...ACROSS AND EAST OF THE LOWER/MIDDLE MISSISSIPPIVALLEY. THE EXTENT OF SUBSTANTIVE BOUNDARY LAYER MOISTENING REMAINSSOMEWHAT OF A QUESTION...BUT ENOUGH INSTABILITY IS EXPECTED IN THEPRESENCE OF STRONG SHEAR TO SUPPORT A RISK FOR SEVERE STORMS ACROSSPARTS OF EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY....LOUISIANA AND ADJACENT SOUTHEAST TEXAS/ARKANSAS/MISSISSIPPI...A MORE CERTAIN WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY FOR THE JUXTAPOSITION OFFAVORABLE LARGE-SCALE FORCING FOR UPWARD VERTICAL MOTION ANDBOUNDARY LAYER DESTABILIZATION APPEARS TO BE SHRINKING TO PORTIONSOF CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN LOUISIANA DURING THE 21/18Z- 22/00Z TIMEFRAME. THIS IS WHERE GUIDANCE CONTINUES TO SUGGEST THAT A RAPIDINCREASE IN SURFACE DEW POINTS TO THE MID 60S IS POSSIBLE...PRIOR TOWEAK MID-LEVEL HEIGHT FALLS AND STRONGER HIGH LEVEL DIFLUENCEOVERSPREADING THE REGION. IT REMAINS UNCLEAR WHETHER LOW-LEVELFORCING WILL REMAIN SUPPORTIVE OF AN ORGANIZED CONVECTIVESYSTEM...BUT THE ENVIRONMENT SEEMS LIKELY TO BE CONDUCIVE TO ATLEAST SCATTERED DISCRETE STORM FORMATION. WIND PROFILESCHARACTERIZED BY STRONG DEEP LAYER SHEAR AND LARGE CLOCKWISE CURVEDLOW-LEVEL HODOGRAPHS WILL BE VERY FAVORABLE FOR SUPERCELLS.TORNADIC POTENTIAL MAY BE ENHANCED AS STORMS TEND TO MOVE ACROSS ORALONG A ROUGHLY NORTHWEST/SOUTHEAST SURFACE WARM FRONTALZONE...THOUGH THE EXTENT OF THIS POTENTIAL WILL DEPEND ON BOUNDARYMODIFICATION TO THE COOL SIDE OF THE FRONT...KERR.. 02/20/2013 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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