• DAY2 Slight Risk Areas

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Fri Mar 28 09:13:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 280607
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 280605

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0105 AM CDT Fri Mar 28 2025

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHERN
    OKLAHOMA INTO THE LOWER MISSOURI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from northern Oklahoma
    into the Lower Missouri Valley on Saturday evening/night. Large to
    very large hail should be the primary hazard, but a couple of severe
    gusts and possibly a tornado or two may occur.

    ...Northern Oklahoma into parts of the Lower Missouri/Mid
    Mississippi Valleys...

    As the primary vorticity maximum within a complex, mid-level
    short-wave trough shifts into the central Plains through the second
    half of the period (Saturday evening/overnight), a surface frontal
    wave will shift northeastward from the Kansas/Oklahoma border area
    into northern Missouri/southern Iowa. This will allow a cold front
    to advance southeastward across Kansas/Oklahoma through the
    overnight period.

    While strong capping is forecast ahead of the front through the day, suppressing diurnal storm development, the increase in
    forcing/ascent after dark should support isolated to scattered storm development -- initially across northern Oklahoma and southeastern
    Kansas, and then spreading northeastward/eastward through the end of
    the period.

    Steep lapse rates/moderate instability above the capping layer will
    allow developing storms to strengthen/organize -- aided by
    veering/increasing flow with height. A few supercells are expected
    to evolve, with very large hail expected to be the primary risk.
    Locally damaging gusts may also occur, and a tornado or two cannot
    be ruled out through the end of the period.

    ...Southern Oklahoma into central Texas...

    A stout EML/strong cap is forecast to prevail from Oklahoma
    southwestward into central Texas through the period. With only weak large-scale ascent at best expected to spread into central Texas
    late, expectations are that capping will persist in hampering storm
    development in most if not all areas. The NAM (both deterministic
    and convection-allowing runs) supports this scenario -- as it
    continues to indicate no convective development. Meanwhile, the GFS
    is most aggressive in late-period, isolated storm development --
    extending across the entire southern/eastern Oklahoma area and
    southwestward to the Edwards Plateau. Meanwhile, in between these
    two solutions, the ECMWF shows a small area of late-period
    development over the Concho Valley vicinity.

    The takeaway from this is that storm development is likely to remain
    isolated at best, slightly elevated if it does occur, and well after
    dark. With that said, severe risk -- though conditional -- is
    evident if storms do develop, given very steep lapse rates/strong
    CAPE above the capping layer, and favorably strong southwesterly
    flow aloft. Therefore, will maintain MRGL risk across this area, to
    cover the conditional potential for large hail, and possibly a
    strong gust with any storm that could develop.

    ..Goss.. 03/28/2025

    $$
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