• DAY2SVR: Nws Storm Prediction Center Norman Ok

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 15 17:11:50 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 151711
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 151710

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1110 AM CST Sun Dec 15 2024

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorm potential is expected to be low on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will amplify as it advances from the central
    Plains to the Great Lakes on Monday. A strong surface low associated
    with this trough will deepen across northern Ontario with a surface
    front extending southward through the Great Lakes and into the
    southern Plains. This front will become more diffuse and eventually
    stall from eastern Texas to central Tennessee as the primary forcing
    moves into the Great Lakes.

    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    from northeast Texas across southeast Oklahoma and Arkansas. While
    these storms may pose some severe threat before 12Z, minimal threat
    is expected to continue after 12Z as heights rise across the region
    and instability weakens through the morning. Additional instability
    is forecast to develop farther south across east Texas and Louisiana
    during the afternoon as temperatures warm into the mid 70s with
    dewpoints in the mid 60s. However, forcing is expected to remain
    weak which should keep any storm development isolated. In addition,
    if storms can develop, weak mid-level flow will keep deep-layer
    shear muted and thus limit much severe weather threat during the
    afternoon.

    ..Bentley.. 12/15/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 16 06:33:24 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 160633
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 160631

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1231 AM CST Mon Dec 16 2024

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are expected from the southern Plains to the Lower
    Ohio and Tennessee Valley vicinities and across Florida on Tuesday. Severe-thunderstorm chances are low at this time.

    ...Eastern OK/ArkLaTex/Ozarks Vicinity...

    An upper trough will deepen as it moves across the Plains to the MS
    Valley vicinity on Tuesday. A 500 mb jet max around 50-70 kt will
    become oriented from eastern OK into the Ohio Valley/lower Great
    Lakes area after 06z, and stronger height falls are not expected to
    overspread the region until the nighttime hours. At the surface, 50s
    to low/mid 60s F dewpoints are expected across south/east TX into
    the Mid-South vicinity. A strong cold front will track southeast
    across KS/OK during the evening, and by 06z be positioned from
    northern AR into southeast OK and north-central TX. This boundary
    will become a focus for increasing isentropic ascent and isolated to
    scattered thunderstorms during the overnight/early Wednesday period.

    Neutral height tendencies will likely suppress convection during the
    day across much of the area. As convection develops along the
    advancing cold front overnight, uncertainty remains regarding any
    surface-based instability overlapping with stronger vertical shear
    (which decreases rapidly with southward extent). Forecast soundings
    vary across forecast guidance, but at least weak elevated
    instability is expected driven by cooling aloft. Stronger elevated
    cores could produce small hail, given forecast lapse rates around
    6.8-7 C/km amid 30+ kt effective shear magnitudes (especially from
    southeast OK into AR). Overall, severe potential appears quite
    conditional for the last 3-6 hours of the forecast period. Will hold
    off on including low-end hail probabilities, though a Marginal
    (level 1 of 5) risk may be needed in later outlooks depending on
    forecast trends.

    ...FL Peninsula...

    Isolated thunderstorms are expected on Tuesday as a moist airmass
    and at least weak instability overspread the region. Onshore,
    easterly low-level flow will provide convergence along an inverted
    surface trough. Given sufficient destabilization, this will support
    development of thunderstorms moving onshore through evening. Weak
    0-6 km bulk shear (less than 20 kt) will preclude organized
    convection, and severe storms are not expected.

    ..Leitman.. 12/16/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 16 17:17:26 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 161717
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 161715

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1115 AM CST Mon Dec 16 2024

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are expected from the southern Plains to the Lower
    Ohio and Tennessee Valley vicinities and across Florida on Tuesday. Severe-thunderstorm chances are low at this time.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level jet streak across the Northwest early on Tuesday will
    start to dig southeast toward the central Plains and sharpen the
    mid-level trough by Tuesday night. As this occurs, a weak surface
    low will develop across eastern Colorado and move into the Lower
    Ohio Valley by the end of the period. A surface front associated
    with this area of low pressure will accelerate southeast,
    particularly after 06Z and end up somewhere from Memphis to Waco by
    12Z Wednesday.

    ...ArkLatex into central Arkansas...
    Despite broad, weak isentropic ascent through the day, only isolated thunderstorm activity is expected from east Texas into the Ozarks
    due to neutral heights aloft. However, thunderstorm activity is
    expected to increase after 06Z as the mid-level trough strengthens
    and approaches the southern Plains/ArkLaTex and a surface front
    becomes better defined and accelerates southeast. Forecast soundings
    show moderate instability (1000-1500 J/kg MUCAPE) and lapse rates
    (~7 C/km) from southern Arkansas to the ArkLaTex. However, the
    stronger flow will remain mostly across northern Arkansas into the
    Ohio Valley. Therefore, shear will be relatively weak where
    thunderstorm activity is most likely along the front from 06Z to
    12Z. This will likely result in loosely organized storms which will
    likely be undercut by the advancing cold front. While isolated hail
    or a wind gust or two cannot be ruled out, severe weather
    probabilities remain low.

    ...Florida...
    Scattered to widespread thunderstorms are expected across much of
    the Florida Peninsula as 1200-1500 J/kg MLCAPE develops during peak
    heating. Shear will be mostly less than 20 knots which should limit
    storm organization. However, moderate instability and scattered to
    widespread storm development could result in some small hail or
    gusty winds. Overall, severe thunderstorms are not expected.

    ..Bentley.. 12/16/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 17 06:33:54 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 170632
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 170631

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1231 AM CST Tue Dec 17 2024

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are possible from the lower Ohio Valley southwest into northeast/central Texas early on Wednesday and across the Southeast,
    Carolinas, and Florida Wednesday afternoon and evening.

    ...Synopsis...

    A positively tilted upper trough will develop east across the
    eastern U.S. on Wednesday. Moderate mid/upper level southwesterly
    flow ahead of the trough will overspread the OH/TN Valleys into the
    Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic regions. At the surface, a cold front
    will extend from southern OH to southeast AR to central TX at the
    beginning of the period. This front will develop southeast across
    the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic, mostly moving offshore from the Gulf
    and Atlantic coasts by Thursday morning.

    ...Northeast TX to the TN Valley...

    Showers and elevated thunderstorms will likely be ongoing near the
    surface cold front Wednesday morning. Forecast soundings show poor
    low-level lapse rates and little surface-based instability. However,
    up to 500 J/kg MUCAPE will be present, courtesy of cool midlevel
    temperatures and modest midlevel lapse rates. Deep-layer flow is
    forecast to remain mostly unidirectional and parallel to the front,
    suggesting convective undercutting by the boundary/outflows. While
    some briefly organized structure may persist the first hour or two
    of the forecast period, convection is expected to rapidly decrease
    in intensity with southeast extent across the TN Valley/Gulf Coast
    states. This is largely due to more modest boundary-layer moisture
    and weakening vertical shear across MS/AL.

    ...FL/GA/Carolinas...

    Isentropic ascent ahead of the approaching upper trough/surface
    front will increase across the region through day. However,
    large-scale ascent will remain weak until late, with the vorticity
    maxima trailing well behind the surface front. Nevertheless, showers
    and isolated thunderstorms will be possible within the low-level
    warm-advection regime, especially during the afternoon/early
    evening. Forecast guidance varies in the depiction of the low-level thermodynamics and degree of destabilization. Though some support
    for an organized storm or two is plausible, given around 750-1000
    J/kg MLCAPE and effective shear magnitudes around 20-30 kt. While a
    strong storm could produce gusty winds or even small hail (given
    somewhat elongated/straight hodographs and cool midlevel temps),
    forecast confidence regarding severe potential remains fairly low.
    Will refrain from introducing low-end/Marginal (level 1 of 5) risk probabilities at this time, though an outlook area may be required
    in subsequent outlooks.

    ..Leitman.. 12/17/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 17 17:31:36 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 171731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 171730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1130 AM CST Tue Dec 17 2024

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated damaging wind gusts and a brief tornado are possible
    through mid-day Wednesday across portions of the Tennessee Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    A positively tilted upper trough will develop east across the
    eastern U.S. on Wednesday. Moderate mid/upper level southwesterly
    flow ahead of the trough will overspread the OH/TN Valleys into the
    Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic regions. At the surface, a cold front
    will extend from southern OH to southeast AR to central TX at the
    beginning of the period. This front will develop southeast across
    the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic, mostly moving offshore from the Gulf
    and Atlantic coasts by Thursday morning.

    ...Northeast Texas to the Tennessee Valley...
    Thunderstorms will be ongoing along a frontal zone from northeast
    Texas to western Tennessee at the beginning of the forecast period.
    These storms will likely be mostly anafrontal due to the
    southeastward advancing cold front and storm motion parallel to the
    front. In addition, these storms should already be in their
    weakening phase by 12Z as they outrun the better low-level
    instability. The only exception will be across western/middle
    Tennessee between 12 and 18Z where some instability will remain and
    stronger flow could promote more organization/propagation ahead of
    the cold front. A damaging wind gust or a brief tornado cannot be
    ruled out early in the forecast period. Despite the weakening
    instability through the morning, some damaging wind threat could
    persist into parts of eastern Tennessee and far southern Kentucky
    through mid-day as the low-level jet strengthens to over 50 knots
    during the morning hours.

    ...FL/GA/Carolinas...
    Southerly flow ahead of the approaching mid-level trough will
    establish low to mid 60s dewpoints across much of Florida into
    eastern Georgia and the eastern Carolinas by Wednesday afternoon.
    Weak to moderate instability is expected within a broad region of
    weak isentropic ascent across the region. Upper-level forcing will
    lag well behind the front which should keep any thunderstorm
    development isolated. However, if any storms develop, they could
    have some marginal hail/wind threat given moderate instability and
    shear present across the region Wednesday afternoon. Storm coverage
    concerns related to weak forcing are the primary limiting factor to
    severe weather probabilities at this time.

    ..Bentley.. 12/17/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 18 05:51:26 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 180550
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180549

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1149 PM CST Tue Dec 17 2024

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Thursday.

    ...Florida...

    A shortwave upper trough within the area of broader eastern CONUS
    troughing will be oriented from the Carolinas to the northeast Gulf
    of Mexico Thursday morning. This system will shift east across FL
    and offshore the Atlantic coast through 00z. At the surface, a cold
    front located over north FL early in the day will develop southward
    across the Peninsula. Low-level flow will be veered/northerly ahead
    of the front, resulting in little low-level convergence.
    Additionally, stronger large-scale ascent will remain well north of
    the Peninsula. While weak destabilization is forecast (500-1000 J/kg
    MLCAPE), mainly over the southern Peninsula, poor lapse rates and
    warm midlevel temperatures will preclude severe thunderstorm
    potential. Most CAMs and calibrated thunder guidance also indicate
    little thunderstorm activity. Will maintain 10 percent general
    thunder probabilities for the southeast FL coast, but even that may
    be generous.

    ..Leitman.. 12/18/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 18 16:50:10 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 181650
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 181648

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1048 AM CST Wed Dec 18 2024

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad mid/upper-level trough with multiple embedded shortwaves
    will remain in place across much of the central/eastern CONUS on
    Thursday. Within the large-scale trough, one strong shortwave will
    move eastward off of the New England coast, while another moves
    southeastward from the Great Plains toward the Ohio Valley and
    Southeast. A weaker shortwave trough will move across Florida during
    the morning and early afternoon. Farther west, a low-amplitude
    mid/upper-level shortwave trough will move across parts of WA/OR
    during the day.

    A dearth of low-level moisture and instability should generally
    limit thunderstorm potential across most of the CONUS. Some
    convection may linger early in the period near the NC coast, but
    thunderstorm potential in this area is expected to remain offshore.
    Otherwise, isolated storm development cannot be ruled out across
    parts of south FL.

    ...Parts of Florida...
    In the wake of a weak frontal passage, very light low-level
    northerly flow is expected on Thursday across much of the FL
    Peninsula. Lingering low-level moisture (with dewpoints in the 60s
    F) will support modest diurnal destabilization. However, despite the
    presence of the approaching shortwave trough and increasing
    mid/upper-level flow, there is currently very little signal for deep
    convection across the peninsula on Thursday, likely resulting from
    modest to poor midlevel lapse rates and weak to negligible low-level convergence and ascent. A conditional general thunderstorm area has
    been maintained across parts of south FL, where somewhat stronger heating/destabilization is possible, though confidence in storm
    development remains low.

    ..Dean.. 12/18/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 19 05:46:43 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 190546
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 190545

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1145 PM CST Wed Dec 18 2024

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected across the Lower 48 on Friday.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper shortwave trough developing southeast over the
    northern/central Plains to the to the Mid-MS Valley will reinforce
    mean upper troughing over the eastern half of the CONUS on Friday.
    Strong surface high pressure will overspread the central U.S. while
    a cold front develops far south into the Gulf and offshore the
    Atlantic coast. This will leave a dry and stable airmass over much
    of the CONUS, and thunderstorm chances will be low.

    ..Leitman.. 12/19/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 19 17:16:44 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 191716
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 191716

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL
    1116 AM CST Thu Dec 19 2024

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected across the Lower 48 on Friday.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper shortwave trough developing southeast over the
    northern/central Plains to the Mid-MS Valley will reinforce mean
    upper troughing over the eastern half of the CONUS on Friday. Strong
    surface high pressure will overspread the central U.S. while a cold
    front develops far south into the Gulf and offshore the Atlantic
    coast. This will leave a dry and stable airmass over much of the
    CONUS, and thunderstorm chances will be low.

    ..15_ows.. 12/19/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 19 17:33:47 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 191733
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 191716

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL
    1116 AM CST Thu Dec 19 2024

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected across the Lower 48 on Friday.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper shortwave trough developing southeast over the
    northern/central Plains to the Mid-MS Valley will reinforce mean
    upper troughing over the eastern half of the CONUS on Friday. Strong
    surface high pressure will overspread the central U.S. while a cold
    front develops far south into the Gulf and offshore the Atlantic
    coast. This will leave a dry and stable airmass over much of the
    CONUS, and thunderstorm chances will be low.

    ..15_ows.. 12/19/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 20 05:51:03 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 200550
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 200549

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1149 PM CST Thu Dec 19 2024

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Saturday.

    ...Discussion...
    The large-scale pattern will be progressive on Saturday, with a
    shortwave trough and related frontal band moving inland across the
    Pacific Northwest and northern California. Steepening mid-level
    lapse rates and weak buoyancy could yield isolated thunderstorms
    mainly for coastal areas of Oregon and northern California during
    the morning, and possibly into the afternoon. Severe thunderstorms
    are not expected given the minimal buoyancy but gusty winds could
    occur with a storm or two along the immediate coast.

    Elsewhere, prevalent surface high pressure east of the Rockies and
    stable conditions will preclude thunderstorms.

    ..Guyer.. 12/20/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 20 17:12:26 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 201712
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 201710

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1110 AM CST Fri Dec 20 2024

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Saturday.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper-level ridge centered near the Continental Divide will
    translate slowly eastward through the day as a strong, compact, negatively-tilted mid-level trough moves into the Pacific Northwest.
    Across the eastern CONUS a trough will persist on Saturday with dry,
    offshore flow at the surface. The lack of low-level moisture will
    limit any thunderstorm potential across most of the CONUS. The only
    exception will be across the Oregon/northern California coasts where
    cooling mid-level temps over the relatively warmer ocean waters may
    result in some shallow instability and the potential for a few
    thunderstorms. The strong low-level jet (50 to 70 knots from 12Z to
    18Z Saturday along the Oregon/northern CA coast) may result in some
    gusty winds, even where lightning is not present. However, overall,
    limited instability should mitigate any severe weather potential.

    ..Bentley.. 12/20/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 21 06:48:33 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 210648
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 210646

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1246 AM CST Sat Dec 21 2024

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Sunday.

    ...Discussion...
    A progressive upper-level pattern will continue across the CONUS on
    Sunday. A continental polar airmass will remain across the eastern
    CONUS which will preclude thunderstorm potential for most of the
    country. A few thunderstorms are possible along the Pacific
    Northwest and northern California coasts, particularly Sunday late
    afternoon and evening as the next in a series of shortwave troughs
    approaches the coast. Severe storms are not currently expected given
    the limited buoyancy.

    ..Guyer.. 12/21/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 21 17:16:05 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 211716
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 211714

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1114 AM CST Sat Dec 21 2024

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Broad upper ridging over the central CONUS will begin to break down
    through the day Sunday as a shortwave trough, currently moving into
    the Pacific Northwest, traverses the Rockies. A broad surface high
    building over the eastern CONUS will maintain cool/dry conditions.
    Weak lee troughing over the High Plains will promote gradual
    moisture return along the TX Gulf coast, but moisture quality/depth
    and poor mid-level lapse rates will be insufficient to support deep
    convection. A pronounced upper wave noted over the northern Pacific
    in water-vapor imagery will approach the West Coast through the
    period. Latest forecast guidance suggests sufficient destabilization
    for a few lightning flashes is possible as colder temperatures aloft
    and broad scale ascent overspread the region. The potential for
    severe convection remains low given very limited buoyancy.

    ..Moore.. 12/21/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 22 07:01:39 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 220701
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 220659

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CST Sun Dec 22 2024

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Monday.

    ...Discussion...
    A shortwave trough is expected to amplify from the central Rockies
    to the south-central High Plains on Monday. Weak surface wave
    development is expected across Texas into southern Oklahoma, with a
    modest increase in low-level moisture across central/east Texas into
    southern Oklahoma in advance of a cold front moving southeastward
    across the southern High Plains. Increasing forcing for ascent and
    elevated moisture transport should lead to increasing elevated
    convection Monday night across north/northeast Texas into southeast
    Oklahoma and the ArkLaTex. While a mid-level capping inversion may
    tend to persist, updrafts should increasingly reach a sufficient depth/temperature late Monday night into early Tuesday for at least
    isolated thunderstorms. Severe thunderstorms are not currently
    expected given access to only weak elevated buoyancy.

    Isolated thunderstorms will also be possible late Monday night
    across the coastal Pacific Northwest and northern California as weak
    buoyancy develops with an upper trough approaching the coast and an inland-moving frontal band.

    ..Guyer.. 12/22/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 22 17:18:14 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 221718
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 221716

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1116 AM CST Sun Dec 22 2024

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Monday.

    A midlevel shortwave trough will amplify from the central Rockies to
    the south-central High Plains on Monday. A weak surface low will
    likely develop across Texas into southern Oklahoma, with a modest
    increase in low-level moisture across central/east Texas into
    southern Oklahoma in advance of a cold front moving southeastward
    across the southern High Plains. Increasing forcing for ascent and
    elevated moisture transport should lead to increasing elevated
    convection Monday night across north/northeast Texas into southeast
    Oklahoma and the ArkLaTex. While a mid-level capping inversion may
    tend to persist, updrafts should increasingly reach a sufficient depth/temperature late Monday night into early Tuesday for at least
    isolated thunderstorms. Severe thunderstorms are not currently
    expected given access to only weak elevated buoyancy.

    Isolated thunderstorms will also be possible late Monday night
    across the coastal Pacific Northwest and northern California as
    temperatures aloft cool with the approaching mid-level trough.

    ..Bentley.. 12/22/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 23 07:03:22 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 230702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 230700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CST Mon Dec 23 2024

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    SOUTH-CENTRAL/EAST TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few locally severe storms could occur across parts of central and
    East Texas on Tuesday.

    ...Central/East Texas...
    A southern-stream shortwave trough will amplify and spread
    east-southeastward on Tuesday across the south-central Plains toward
    the Ozarks. Low-level moisture will modestly increase across the
    Texas coastal plain into south-central/east Texas during the day.
    Lower 60s F surface dewpoints will become increasingly common inland
    ahead a southeast-moving cold front that will extend from
    north-central Texas southwestward toward the Edwards Plateau Tuesday
    afternoon.

    In proximity to a surface wave and near/north of a warm front,
    scattered convection should be ongoing Tuesday morning across far north/northeast Texas and the ArkLaTex vicinity/southeast Oklahoma.
    Modest diurnal destabilization (up to 750-1000 J/kg MLCAPE) should
    occur ahead of the southeastward-moving effective cold front, mainly
    across south-central to east/southeast Texas including the I-35/I-45
    corridors. As this occurs, a diurnally related intensification of
    storms is expected near the southeast-advancing front, and possibly
    also in the nearby free warm sector during the afternoon. A few of
    these storms could be severe.

    Effective shear will not be overly strong (30-35 kt), including some
    flow weakness continuing to be noted in model soundings around 2-3
    km AGL. Even so, some organized storm modes including weak/transient
    supercells could occur with marginally severe hail and/or a few
    locally severe wind gusts, mainly during the afternoon and evening.

    ...Northern California/Pacific Northwest...
    As a prominent upper-level trough and related frontal band moves
    inland, isolated thunderstorms will be possible across northern
    California coastal areas and interior valley on Tuesday, early in
    the day with the frontal band and with post-frontal cellular
    convection during the day as low/mid-level lapse rates steepen. A
    more limited/isolated thunderstorm potential will also exist across
    other parts of the coastal Pacific Northwest.

    ..Guyer.. 12/23/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 23 17:19:54 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 231719
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 231718

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1118 AM CST Mon Dec 23 2024

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    SOUTH-CENTRAL/EAST TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few locally severe storms could occur across parts of central and
    East Texas on Tuesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    On Tuesday a progressive upper-level pattern will be present with a
    positively tilted mid-level trough advancing off the New England
    Coast, a mid-level trough amplifying across the southern Plains, and
    a stronger trough moving from off the California coast to the
    Southwest during the forecast period. Inland low-level moisture will
    result in some instability, adequate for thunderstorms across
    portions of the southern Plains. A few of these storms may be severe
    across central/east Texas.

    ...Central/East Texas...
    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    within the warm air advection zone across eastern Oklahoma. South of
    this activity, isolated convection may be possible within a region
    of broad ascent associated with a 30 to 35 knot low-level jet.
    Instability and shear will likely be too weak for severe
    thunderstorms from this activity. However, by Tuesday
    afternoon/evening, continued moisture advection and some weak
    surface heating should result in greater instability along and south
    of the cold front/composite outflow across northeast Texas. In
    addition to the greater instability, forcing will increase ahead of
    the approaching trough and mid-level flow will strengthen. This will
    likely result in scattered convection amid weak to moderate
    instability and 30 to 35 knots of shear. Some transient supercell
    structures may be possible along and ahead of the cold front as it
    advances southeast through the afternoon and evening. While the
    low-level flow is forecast to be quite weak, particularly across
    southeast Texas where instability will be greatest, forecast
    hodographs do show significant clockwise curvature in the lowest 1
    to 2 km. Therefore, a tornado cannot be ruled out, particularly
    with any stronger/longer-lived supercells which may develop.

    ...Northern California/Pacific Northwest...
    As a prominent upper-level trough and related frontal band moves
    inland, isolated thunderstorms will be possible across northern
    California coastal areas and the adjacent Central Valley on Tuesday
    morning with the frontal band and later in the day with post-frontal
    cellular convection as low/mid-level lapse rates steepen. A more limited/isolated thunderstorm potential will also exist across other
    parts of the coastal Pacific Northwest.

    ..Bentley.. 12/23/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 24 06:53:56 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 240653
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 240652

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1252 AM CST Tue Dec 24 2024

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Christmas Day (Wednesday).

    ...Synopsis...
    In the southern stream, a lead shortwave trough initially over east
    Texas on Wednesday is expected to steadily weaken toward the Lower
    Mississippi Valley, while a secondary and more prominent shortwave
    trough modestly amplifies as it progresses east-southeastward over
    the southern Rockies toward far west Texas Wednesday night.

    ...Southern Louisiana...
    Some thunderstorms may linger Wednesday morning from near the
    middle/upper Texas coast into Louisiana. It is not entirely clear
    how far north the warm sector will develop, but it is possible that
    modest instability develops across far southern Louisiana during the
    day, although weakening mass field trends would suggest that the
    main warm/moist sector will remain offshore. If the airmass does
    modestly destabilize inland, a few strong storms could occur given
    that moderately strong deep-layer/low-level shear will exist near
    the warm front. Current thinking is that organized severe potential
    will remain limited, but this will be reevaluated into the Day 1
    time frame.

    ...West/northwest Texas...
    Related to the approaching shortwave trough, steadily increasing
    forcing for ascent via DPVA/warm advection will arrive late
    Wednesday night. Steepening mid-level lapse rates and minimal
    buoyancy could potentially support isolated elevated thunderstorm
    development by daybreak (12z) Thursday.

    ...Pacific Northwest/northern California...
    A few near-coastal thunderstorms could occur as a shortwave
    trough/frontal band approaches the coast and mid-level lapse rates
    regionally steepen.

    ..Guyer.. 12/24/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 24 17:16:29 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 241716
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 241715

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1115 AM CST Tue Dec 24 2024

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Christmas Day (Wednesday).

    ...Synopsis...
    A lead shortwave trough initially along the Middle Texas Gulf Coast
    region will continue to move east on Wednesday. Model trends
    continue to show this feature weakening through the day. Further,
    this trough has also trended slightly southward in placement over
    the past few model cycles. A secondary, stronger shortwave trough
    will move through the Four Corners and reach the southern High
    Plains by Thursday morning.

    ...Southern Louisiana...
    Current observations within the Gulf show low 60s F dewpoints
    offshore. Given the forecast location of the lead shortwave and
    weakening mass fields during the day, these dewpoints appear more
    likely to remain generally offshore, south of a weak warm front.
    While a few thunderstorms appear probable during the afternoon near
    the boundary, very minimal buoyancy (100-200 J/kg of MLCAPE)
    suggests the potential for severe storms will remain low. Marginally
    stronger storms could occur in far southeast Louisiana, where
    buoyancy could be locally greater.

    ...West/Northwest Texas...
    Forcing for ascent will increase towards Thursday morning. Mid-level
    lapse rates will steepen sufficiently to support a few stronger
    elevated convective cores. A few isolated lightning flashes will be
    possible with this activity.

    ...Pacific Northwest/northern California...
    With the approach of another shortwave trough late Wednesday
    night/early Thursday, mid-level height falls/cooling will support
    isolated thunderstorms along the immediate coastline.

    ..Wendt.. 12/24/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 25 07:05:02 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 250704
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 250703

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0103 AM CST Wed Dec 25 2024

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    CENTRAL/EAST TEXAS AND WESTERN LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected on Thursday across central/east
    Texas into western Louisiana and possibly southeast Oklahoma and the
    ArkLaTex region.

    ...Central/East Texas to ArkLaTex/Lower Mississippi Valley...
    A low-amplitude southern-stream shortwave trough is expected to
    transition east-northeastward across Texas toward the Ozarks
    Thursday and Thursday night. In response, modest surface
    cyclogenesis should occur across west into North Texas toward the ArkLaTex/Ozarks, with an increasingly moist airmass becoming
    established across much of east/southeast Texas into Louisiana and
    the ArkLaTex.

    Scattered showers and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing and
    increasing Thursday morning across north Texas into southern
    Oklahoma. These storms and the timing/location thereof will be an
    influential factor for the main corridor of severe-weather potential
    into the afternoon, limiting the northern extent of destabilization
    where clouds/convection persist.

    Thinking remains that a surface-based severe risk should increase by
    Thursday midday/early afternoon initially across
    east-central/possibly North Texas, perhaps generally around I-35,
    but probably more so toward the I-45 corridor.

    Lower/some middle 60s F warm-sector dewpoints are expected across
    south-central to east/southeast Texas into Louisiana, contributing
    to upwards of 1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE across east/southeast Texas by
    afternoon, with more minimal/uncertain destabilization northward
    into southeast Oklahoma and ArkLaTex, where at least some severe
    risk could still occur. Strong deep-layer/low-level shear,
    highlighted by 45-55 kt effective shear and 200-300 m2/s2 0-1 km
    SRH, will support a mixed mode of northeastward-moving bowing
    segments and semi-discrete/embedded supercells. Isolated large hail
    will initially be possible, with a damaging wind risk increasing
    during the afternoon along with the potential for a few tornadoes,
    potentially including the possibility of a strong tornado (EF2+).

    Convective intensity and overall severe potential will likely tend
    to wane progressively into late evening/overnight, but at least a low-end/isolated severe risk will probably persist into parts of
    Louisiana and possibly as far east as the ArkLaMiss vicinity
    overnight.

    ..Guyer.. 12/25/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Dec 25 17:31:38 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 251731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 251730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1130 AM CST Wed Dec 25 2024

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    CENTRAL/EAST TEXAS...LOUISIANA...AND SOUTHERN ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected on Thursday across central/east
    Texas into western Louisiana and possibly southeast Oklahoma and the
    ArkLaTex region.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level low, initially over the Texas Panhandle at the beginning
    of the period Thursday will slowly move east and become negatively
    tilted and more compact as it translates across the southern Plains
    and ends the period in the mid-Mississippi Valley. As this occurs, a
    surface low will strengthen across central Texas and move into
    Arkansas Thursday evening. As this cyclone intensifies,
    strengthening surface winds will draw mid 60s dewpoints northward
    across much of East Texas and Louisiana with low 60s dewpoints
    possibly into southern Arkansas.

    ...Central/East Texas to the Arklatex and much of Louisiana...
    Some showers and a few thunderstorms are possible within the warm
    air advection regime across East Texas and southern Louisiana
    Thursday morning. Relatively weak lapse rates and weak forcing
    should keep the severe weather threat somewhat subdued during the
    morning to early afternoon, but near-surface based parcels and
    clockwise curving hodographs could support some mini-supercells and
    an isolated tornado threat.

    Expect a gradual increase in convective coverage through the day as
    the low-level jet intensifies ahead of the approaching wave and
    greater surface based instability develops across southeast Texas.
    Moderate instability and strong shear will support the potential for
    supercells with an initial threat for large hail and a greater
    tornado threat during the late afternoon and evening as the
    low-level jet intensifies. The HRRR suggests much greater
    instability and low-level shear across the warm sector Thursday
    afternoon than the rest of the hi-res guidance. If this solution
    were to materialize, greater tornado probabilities would likely be
    warranted, but this appears to be more of an outlier solution at
    this time.

    Nonetheless, a favorable supercell environment will exist across
    east Texas with an increasing tornado threat later in the afternoon
    and evening. Any mature supercells which can develop during the
    afternoon amid greater instability and remain discrete into the
    evening as the low-level jet intensifies could pose a threat for a
    strong (EF2+ tornado).

    In addition, expect a squall line to intensify during the evening.
    Instability will be relatively weak farther north, but could remain
    sufficient to convectively transport the 50 to 70 knot low-level jet
    to the surface across parts of southeast Oklahoma, southern
    Arkansas, and northern Louisiana Thursday evening and into the
    overnight hours.

    ...Pacific Northwest to California Coast...
    A cold front will move onto the California Coast at the beginning of
    the period with the potential for some gusty winds. Hodographs will
    be cyclonically curved ahead of the front, but it appears
    surface-based instability will be limited until colder air aloft
    arrives in the wake of the front. Therefore, some thunderstorm
    threat will exist through the day, but no severe weather is
    anticipated.

    ..Bentley.. 12/25/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 26 07:00:41 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 260700
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 260659

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CST Thu Dec 26 2024

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong to locally severe thunderstorms could occur across the
    Lower Mississippi Valley Friday.

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Cyclonically curved westerlies will feature multiple mid-level
    disturbances influencing the region on Friday, including one
    shortwave trough that will quickly spread northeastward away from
    the region early Friday, with a more glancing influence by a
    secondary impulse later in the day.

    Linearly organized thunderstorms are expected to be ongoing Friday
    morning, potentially from western/Middle Tennessee
    south-southwestward across eastern/southern Mississippi into
    Louisiana. Some strong to locally severe storms could occur/linger
    early in the day across parts of Mississippi, where a modest
    reservoir of instability may reside coincident with a residually
    strong deep-layer/low-level wind field, even while the main upper
    system quickly shifts away from the region. Some air mass recovery
    is possible during the day on the southern periphery of the early
    day storms across Mississippi and possibly into nearby
    Louisiana/Alabama. Overall instability should remain relatively
    weak, but sufficient moisture/buoyancy in the presence of 35-40 kt
    of effective shear could potentially allow for a few weak/transient
    supercells in the afternoon. A couple of locally severe storms could
    occur.

    Thunderstorms may otherwise increase in a northward-expanding trend
    late Friday night, potentially near the upper Texas coast and more
    so across parts of Louisiana and Mississippi. This will be as the
    low-level baroclinic zone begins to return northward and isentropic
    ascent increases. Some hail cannot be entirely ruled out in the
    presence of 500-1000 J/kg MUCAPE and around 35-40 kt of shear within
    the cloud-bearing layer.

    ..Guyer.. 12/26/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Dec 26 17:22:14 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 261722
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 261720

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1120 AM CST Thu Dec 26 2024

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST INTO CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI/ALABAMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong to locally severe thunderstorms could occur across
    parts of the central Gulf Coast into central Mississippi and
    Alabama.

    ...Synopsis...
    A progressive pattern with multiple embedded mid-level shortwave
    troughs will traverse the Southern Plains and Southeast on Friday.
    The first of these shortwave troughs, associated with the DY1 severe
    weather risk, will be located in the Mid-Mississippi Valley on
    Friday morning. A secondary mid-level trough will cross the Mid-Mississippi/Lower-Mississippi valley between 18Z and 00Z on
    Friday. Finally, another mid-level trough will start to sharpen
    across central/northern Texas toward the end of the period.

    ...Central Gulf Coast into central MS/AL...
    A broken line of thunderstorms, perhaps with some marginal wind
    damage threat, will likely be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    across central MS. The mid-level shortwave trough associated with
    this convection will move quickly north and deamplify during the
    morning which will likely result in weakening convection by mid-day.
    A reservoir of instability will remain across the central Gulf Coast
    with perhaps some northward advection into central MS/AL during the
    early afternoon as the next mid-level trough approaches the region.
    The primary forcing/height falls associated with this trough will
    remain mostly north of the warm sector, but a glancing blow could
    result in isolated thunderstorms. Lapse rates will remain weak, but
    sufficient effective shear (35-40 knots) could result in a few
    stronger/more organized storms capable of large hail or some
    damaging wind gusts.

    Removed the marginal risk across central Louisiana for the threat of
    elevated thunderstorms with the northward advancing warm front late
    in the period. It appears the primary forcing associated with the
    mid-level trough and strengthening low-level jet will be after 12Z
    Saturday.

    ..Bentley.. 12/26/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 27 07:21:44 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 270720
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 270719

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0119 AM CST Fri Dec 27 2024

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    An active severe-weather day is expected Saturday into Saturday
    night, with severe storms likely from east Texas across the Lower
    Mississippi Valley into parts of the Tennessee Valley. Large hail,
    damaging winds, and tornadoes are likely, potentially including a
    few strong (EF2+) tornadoes.

    ...East Texas/Lower Mississippi Valley to Tennessee Valley...
    A southern-stream shortwave trough is likely to overspread the
    southern Plains east-northeastward to the Ozarks/Mid-South Saturday
    and Saturday night, with a notable and concerning strengthening of
    winds aloft into late Saturday afternoon and Saturday night. This is highlighted by global guidance depictions of increasingly strong
    (50+ kt) west-southwesterly winds in the lowest 2-3 km AGL.

    Scattered early day convection and residual cloud cover remain
    potential complicating factors as far as forecast details,
    particularly regarding the northern extent of the primary
    surface-based severe risk later Saturday afternoon into Saturday
    night. There are also continues to be some longitudinal uncertainty
    as far as the initial severe risk across East Texas and the ArkLaTex
    vicinity during the day, although Slight Risk-caliber severe
    probabilities have been expanded westward with this update.

    Even with these forecast uncertainties, ample mass response related
    to the approaching/ejection of the mid/upper-level trough, and a
    related steepening of mid-level lapse rates and strengthening
    deep-layer flow fields, should result in a steady uptick of
    potentially severe convection into Saturday night. This should
    initially occur across East Texas toward the ArkLaMiss vicinity,
    where middle 60s F surface dewpoints will become more common to the
    south of a warm front shifting northward across the Mid-South.

    With strengthening deep-layer shear/forcing for ascent through the
    day, it appears that all severe-weather modes and hazards will
    regionally occur, including semi-discrete supercells and linearly
    organized bowing segments. This includes the potential for large
    hail, mostly with initial development during the day, as well as
    damaging winds and tornadoes, some of which could be strong (EF2+)
    as 0-1 km SRH increases to 200-400 m2/s2 into mid/late Saturday
    afternoon and Saturday night.

    At least some damaging wind/tornado threat will probably continue
    through late Saturday night/early Sunday, including parts of
    Alabama/Florida Panhandle, and potentially northward into the
    Cumberland plateau vicinity. This risk will exist even with minimal
    buoyancy, in the presence of a robust deep-layer/low-level shear
    environment highlighted by a 50-65 kt low-level jet.

    ..Guyer.. 12/27/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Dec 27 17:33:51 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 271732
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 271731

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1131 AM CST Fri Dec 27 2024

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS
    OF EAST TEXAS...THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER VALLEY INTO THE
    TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A regional outbreak of severe storms, with large hail, damaging
    winds, and strong tornadoes is possible Saturday into Saturday
    night, from East Texas, across the Lower Mississippi Valley, into
    parts of the Tennessee Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    Mid-level flow is expected to rapidly amplify over the southern
    CONUS Saturday, as several southern stream perturbations intensify
    as they move near the Gulf Coast. A prominent shortwave trough,
    initial located across the southern OH Valley, will quickly eject
    northward as a second stronger shortwave approaches from the
    southern Plains vicinity. A roughly east-west oriented warm front
    will quickly move inland overnight Friday and into early Saturday in
    response to increased mid-level height falls and a deepening surface
    low near the Red River. This will allow for robust moisture return,
    with upper 60s to low 70s F dewpoints likely across the lower MS
    Valley by daybreak. While clouds and precipitation from inland
    moisture advection may complicate destabilization to some degree,
    sufficient buoyancy is expected to support numerous strong to severe
    storms with all hazards possible from East TX and the lower MS
    valley, into the TN valley from Saturday morning into early Sunday.

    ...East TX, Lower MS Valley...
    As the mid-level flow pattern quickly amplifies Saturday, the
    prominent shortwave trough and a subtle lead wave over the southern
    plains should rapidly strengthen, taking on neutral to slightly
    negative tilts by 00z Sunday. As this occurs, increasingly strong
    diffluent flow aloft will overspread East Texas toward the ArkLaMiss
    vicinity, where middle 60s F surface dewpoints will become more
    common. Steepening low/mid-level lapse rates and diurnal heating
    should allow for moderate destabilization, despite some lingering
    clouds and isolated elevated storms.

    Deeper convection is expected to develop early in the period
    (11-14z) as ascent from the embedded perturbation and main trough
    move over a pre-frontal confluence axis across East TX/Western LA. A
    second round of robust convection may also develop across eastern TX
    later in the afternoon as a Pacific front associated with the
    surface low over North TX impinges on the warm sector from the west.
    A mix of semi-discrete supercells and linearly organized bowing
    segments are expected with sufficient buoyancy/deep-layer shear
    overlap for storm organization. An initial risk for large hail,
    especially where low-level flow is somewhat veered, should
    transition to a risk for damaging winds and tornadoes as 0-1 km SRH
    increases to 150-300 m2/s2 into mid/late Saturday afternoon with a
    35+ kt 850 mb low-level jet.

    Convection should quickly spread northeast into the lower MS Valley,
    peaking in intensity through the afternoon and early evening hours.
    Coincident with an increase in the low-level jet to 45-65 kt and
    intensifying surface pressure falls, low-level hodographs will
    expand with 0-1 km SRH of 300-400 m2/s2 likely. This will support
    the potential for strong tornadoes with any established
    suppercellular elements.

    ...Tennessee Valley and Cumberland Plateau...
    As the upper trough continues to amplify through the day, the warm
    front will gradually lift north into the southern TN valley by early
    afternoon. A broad area of cloud cover and perhaps light stratiform precipitation is expected in the presence of strong isentropic
    ascent along the advancing warm front. This remains the primary
    uncertainty regarding the northern/eastern extent of the
    surface-based severe risk later Saturday afternoon into Saturday
    night. While buoyancy/destabilization may be muted, the intensifying
    upper trough and surface low will favor very strong low and
    mid-level wind fields supportive of storm organization into Saturday
    evening and early Sunday. With very large low-level hodographs (0-1
    km SRH 300-500 m2/s2) weakly buoyant near-surface based parcels will
    still allow for some tornado and or damaging wind risk into the
    overnight hours, especially with any established supercell or bowing
    structures across parts of AL, TN and western GA.

    ..Lyons.. 12/27/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 28 07:04:07 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 280703
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 280702

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0102 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms are possible across parts of the Southeast,
    Mid-Atlantic, and upper Ohio Valley on Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A pronounced upper-level trough will intensify as it pivots
    northeast across much of the eastern U.S. Sunday. An associated
    surface low will deepen as it moves northeast from western portions
    of KY/TN into the eastern Great Lakes region. A trailing cold front
    will move east across the southeast/mid-Atlantic states, approaching
    the coast during the afternoon/evening.

    ...Southeast/mid-Atlantic States...
    One or more lines of thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at 12z
    Sunday near and in advance of the cold front, aided by large-scale
    ascent with the upper trough and low-level warm/moist advection.
    These early-day storms will have severe potential, primarily in the
    form of strong/damaging gusts. Low-level moisture, with surface dew
    points in the 60s, will advect north throughout the day, reaching as
    far north as the VA/NC border by afternoon. Extensive cloud cover
    will tend to temper heating/destabilization, with generally weak
    instability in advance of the cold front (pockets of MLCAPE between
    500 and 1000 J/kg, locally higher over the northern FL peninsula).

    Thunderstorms should re-intensify or re-develop during the afternoon
    as the stronger large-scale ascent overspreads the moistening warm
    sector, with a linear structure likely the dominant storm mode along
    the cold front as it moves towards the coast by late
    afternoon/evening. Very strong low- and mid-level wind fields will
    aid in downward momentum transport resulting in damaging winds as
    the primary severe risk. Transient QLCS circulations will also pose
    a risk for a tornado or two, especially from portions of eastern GA
    across the central Carolinas, where the best overlap of instability
    and favorable low-level shear will exist. Isolated instances of hail
    will also be possible with the most intense updrafts.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley...
    Beneath the primary mid-level cold core near the center of the
    surface low, differential temperature advection above low-mid 50s F
    dewpoints should steepen low/mid-level lapse rates sufficiently for
    modest diurnal destabilization resulting in a few hundred J/kg of
    MUCAPE. This may be sufficient for a risk of a few damaging wind
    gusts or small hail with low-topped strong storms, given 45-60 kt of
    low-level flow beneath the upper trough.

    ..Bunting.. 12/28/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Dec 28 17:36:05 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 281735
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 281734

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1134 AM CST Sat Dec 28 2024

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND CAROLINAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms are possible across parts of the Southeast,
    Mid-Atlantic, and upper Ohio Valley on Sunday.

    ...Southeast and Mid-Atlantic Vicinity...

    A negative-tilt mid/upper trough will progress quickly northeast
    from the MS/TN Valley to the lower Great Lakes/Mid-Atlantic on
    Sunday. A strong 70-90 kt midlevel jet over the TN/OH Valley early
    in the period will weaken somewhat as the system lifts northeast.
    Nevertheless, abundant vertical shear will overspread the region
    through the daytime and evening hours. A mixed convective mode is
    expected, especially with southward extent into SC/GA and northern
    FL with a QLCS and semi-discrete cells possible. With northward
    extent and where stronger large-scale ascent will be focused, a
    narrow band of convection will move across portions of WV/VA/NC.

    Stronger instability will be focused to the south, from SC into
    north FL, where 60s F dewpoints will allow for 500-1200 J/kg MLCAPE.
    Weaker boundary-layer moisture and cooler temperatures with
    northward extent will limit surface-based instability. Nevertheless,
    fast moving linear convection will still pose a risk for sporadic
    strong to severe wind gusts from NC into VA/WV. Where stronger
    instability and potential for semi-discrete cells are forecast from
    SC southward, a greater risk for damaging gusts, a few tornadoes and
    marginally severe hail will exist.

    ...Ohio Valley...

    A synoptically favorable setup for cold-core convection will
    overspread the region during the afternoon as a surface low lifts
    northeast near the IN/OH border. A narrow corridor of mid-50s F
    dewpoints will nose into central OH ahead of the low and attendant
    surface front. Modest steepening of midlevel lapse rates associated
    with the ejecting upper trough will support minor destabilization
    (generally less than 250 J/kg MUCAPE) amid modest vertical shear.
    Thermodynamic profiles indicate low-topped convection is possible,
    though CAMs guidance is very anemic in the depiction of this
    convection given poor thermodynamics. Nevertheless, at least a
    conditional risk, mainly for strong gusts, will exist during the
    early to mid afternoon.

    ..Leitman.. 12/28/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 29 06:55:09 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 290655
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 290653

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1253 AM CST Sun Dec 29 2024

    Valid 301200Z - 311200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm chances appear low on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A departing upper-level trough will lift northeast early Monday as a
    surface cold front moves offshore over New England. An upstream
    upper-level trough will amplify as it moves into the central Plains, contributing to the development of a surface low near the KS/MO
    border by afternoon. Low-level moisture will begin to return north
    across the lower Mississippi Valley/Ark-La-Miss region, however
    richer moisture will remain confined to near the TX/LA coast. This
    will limit destabilization potential even as ascent/cooling
    mid-level temperatures develop near the surface low. Thus, while an
    isolated lightning strike will be possible in the presence of meager
    MUCAPE (around 100-200 J/kg) across the mid-Mississippi Valley area
    Monday night, overall coverage should be less than 10%.

    Elsewhere across the CONUS, generally dry/stable conditions should
    preclude thunderstorm potential.

    ..Bunting.. 12/29/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Dec 29 17:08:24 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 291708
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 291706

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1106 AM CST Sun Dec 29 2024

    Valid 301200Z - 311200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm chances appear low on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper shortwave trough will lift northeast across New England
    toward the Canadian Maritimes on Monday. At the surface, deep low
    pressure over southern Ontario will lift north while an attendant
    cold front pushes offshore the Atlantic coast. In the wake of the
    Northeast U.S. system, another upper shortwave trough will migrate
    from the northern/central Plains to the Mid-MS/Lower OH Valley
    region. A surface low is forecast to move from the KS/NE to IL/IN. A
    prior cold frontal passage into the Gulf of Mexico will result in
    richer boundary-layer moisture remaining confined to the immediate
    coastal area despite increasing southerly low-level flow across the south-central U.S. Meager elevated instability, generally less than
    200 J/kg MUCAPE, will overspread portions of the Lower MO/Mid-MS
    Valley ahead of the surface low and upper trough. While a couple of
    lightning flashes are possible with developing precipitation during
    the evening/overnight, coverage is expected to remain less than 10
    percent, precluding a general thunder delineation.

    ..Leitman.. 12/29/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 30 06:34:23 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 300634
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 300632

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1232 AM CST Mon Dec 30 2024

    Valid 311200Z - 011200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible from the Outer Banks into
    southern New England late Tuesday into early Wednesday. Severe
    thunderstorms are not expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A compact shortwave trough is forecast to move from the OH Valley
    northeastward into southern New England on Tuesday. An attendant
    surface low will take a similar path throughout the day while
    gradually occluding, reaching western NY by late Tuesday night/early
    Wednesday morning. An associated cold front is expected to push from
    the Mid MS/Lower OH Valleys eastward through the remainder of the OH
    Valley, the TN Valley, and Southeast States. By Wednesday evening, a
    surface low generated by secondary cyclogenesis at the triple point
    will likely be over the Delmarva Peninsula vicinity, with the
    associated cold front extending from this low southwestward through
    the central Carolinas, southern GA, and the western FL Peninsula.
    Continued eastward progress will take this front off the East Coast
    and through all but south FL by early Wednesday morning.

    Limited low-level moisture and attendant buoyancy is anticipated
    ahead of this shortwave and its associated cold front, precluding
    thunderstorm development across much of the eastern CONUS. Some
    deeper convective cores are possible along and ahead of the cold
    front across the middle OH Valley Wednesday morning. A few lightning
    flashes are possible, but current expectation is for overall
    coverage to remain less than 10 percent. A greater risk for
    thunderstorms is possible from the NC Outer Banks into southern New
    England from Tuesday evening into Wednesday morning. Here, strong
    warm-air advection within the warm conveyor could result in a few
    elevated storms deep enough to produce lightning.

    ..Mosier.. 12/30/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Dec 30 17:08:56 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 301708
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 301707

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1107 AM CST Mon Dec 30 2024

    Valid 311200Z - 011200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible from the Outer Banks into
    southern New England late Tuesday into early Wednesday. Severe
    thunderstorms are not expected.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper trough will pivot northeast from the Midwest toward the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast on Tuesday. A prior cold frontal passage
    across this region will result in limited boundary-layer moisture
    despite increasing low-level south/southeasterly flow ahead of a
    surface low. The exception will be along the immediate coast from
    near the Outer Banks to southern New England Tuesday night into
    early Wednesday. Surface-based instability will remain limited, but
    weak elevated instability amid increasing large-scale ascent and
    cooling aloft may be sufficient for isolated thunderstorms from the
    Outer Banks (Tuesday afternoon) into southern New England (mainly
    after 00z). Severe storms are not expected.

    ..Leitman.. 12/30/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 31 06:37:00 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 310636
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 310635

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1235 AM CST Tue Dec 31 2024

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Broad cyclonic flow is expected to persist across the CONUS on
    Wednesday as one shortwave trough exits the Northeast and a series
    of low-amplitude shortwave troughs follow in its wake across the
    Plains. The strongest of these latter shortwaves is expected to move southeastward from the northern Rockies into the central Plains.

    At the surface, a low is forecast to begin the period over southern
    New England before then quickly moving northeastward. Surface
    ridging associated with a dry continental airmass will settle in
    across the central and eastern CONUS, precluding any thunderstorm
    potential. Dry and stable conditions are anticipated across the
    western CONUS as well.

    ..Mosier.. 12/31/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Dec 31 16:45:58 2024
    ACUS02 KWNS 311645
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 311643

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1043 AM CST Tue Dec 31 2024

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper low will be situated over northern Ontario with a broad
    area of lower heights across the Canadian Prairies. South of this
    low, a broad fetch of moderate to strong high-level flow will extend
    from the western US into the Southeast, with a leading wave ejecting
    in negative-tilt fashion across the Northeast. With time, upper
    ridging will occur along the West Coast.

    At the surface, high pressure will be centered over the central to
    southern Plains, with a deepening low over Maine, in association
    with the upper wave. As a result, northerly winds will exist along
    the Gulf Coast, with offshore flow along the East Coast as well. The
    end result will be stable conditions across the bulk of the CONUS,
    with little if any thunderstorm or lightning potential. While a
    flash or two cannot be ruled out ahead of the New England surface
    low, any weak elevated instability should remain largely offshore.

    ..Jewell.. 12/31/2024

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 06:10:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 010610
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 010609

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1209 AM CST Wed Jan 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected Thursday.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A shortwave trough is forecast to rotate through the central/eastern
    CONUS upper troughing on Thursday, progressing cyclonically from the
    central Plains through the Mid MS Valley into the Southeast States
    and southern Appalachians. Another shortwave trough is expected to
    drop southeastward through the Upper Midwest early Friday morning.
    Progression of these waves will help maintain upper troughing east
    of the Rockies through Friday morning.

    Farther west, expansive upper ridging will gradually shift eastward
    throughout the day, ending the period extended from northern Mexico
    into western British Columbia. A strong shortwave trough will
    approach the Pacific Northwest coast, but is expected to remain
    offshore throughout the period.

    The surface pattern is expected to feature ridging centered over the
    TN Valley, resulting in offshore flow across the majority of the
    CONUS. Another surge of cold air is anticipated across the Plains,
    helping to reinforce the cold and dry conditions already in place.
    Westerly surface winds are forecast across the Gulf of Mexico, but
    the development of a weak surface low just off the south TX coast
    should preclude any low-level moisture from advecting inland.
    Consequently, any thunderstorms activity should stay over the
    western Gulf. Dry and stable conditions will prevent thunderstorm
    development elsewhere.

    ..Mosier.. 01/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 07:17:41 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 010717
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 010716

    Day 2 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0116 AM CST Wed Jan 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    CORRECTED FOR TYPO IN DISCUSSION

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected Thursday.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A shortwave trough is forecast to rotate through the central/eastern
    CONUS upper troughing on Thursday, progressing cyclonically from the
    central Plains through the Mid MS Valley into the Southeast States
    and southern Appalachians. Another shortwave trough is expected to
    drop southeastward through the Upper Midwest early Friday morning.
    Progression of these waves will help maintain upper troughing east
    of the Rockies through Friday morning.

    Farther west, expansive upper ridging will gradually shift eastward
    throughout the day, ending the period extended from northern Mexico
    into western British Columbia. A strong shortwave trough will
    approach the Pacific Northwest coast, but is expected to remain
    offshore throughout the period.

    The surface pattern is expected to feature ridging centered over the
    TN Valley, resulting in offshore flow across the majority of the
    CONUS. Another surge of cold air is anticipated across the Plains,
    helping to reinforce the cold and dry conditions already in place. Easterly/northeasterly surface winds are forecast across the Gulf of
    Mexico, but the development of a weak surface low just off the south
    TX coast should preclude any low-level moisture from advecting
    inland. Consequently, any thunderstorms activity should stay over
    the western Gulf. Dry and stable conditions will prevent
    thunderstorm development elsewhere.

    ..Mosier.. 01/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 1 17:04:22 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 011704
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 011702

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1102 AM CST Wed Jan 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Moderate to strong northwest flow aloft will exist across the CONUS
    on Thursday, extending from an upper ridge over the West Coast to
    the East Coast. As this western ridge shifts eastward, a tightening
    midlevel thermal gradient will develop over the Plains, with a minor
    trough amplification from the Mid/Lower MS Valley into the
    Southeast.

    At the surface, high pressure will maintain a stable air mass over
    land, with any appreciable instability over the western Gulf of
    Mexico. As the upper wave develops, lift will increase across
    portions of the northern Gulf Coast after 00Z, with precipitation
    developing. It still appears that any weak elevated instability may
    be insufficient for thunderstorms over land, but a isolated flash
    cannot be ruled out near the TX/LA Coasts.

    ..Jewell.. 01/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 2 06:57:39 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 020657
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 020655

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1255 AM CST Thu Jan 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Friday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A pair of phased shortwave troughs are forecast to progress through
    the large-scale troughing expected to be in place across the eastern
    CONUS, moving off the Mid-Atlantic coast by Friday afternoon.
    Mid-level flow will strengthen in the wake of these waves,
    coincident with another shortwave trough dropping from the northern
    Plains into the Mid MS Valley. Expansive surface ridging will cover
    much of the central and eastern CONUS, with the associated dry and
    stable conditions dominating the sensible weather and precluding
    thunderstorm development.

    Father west, ridging will continue gradually shifting eastward,
    ahead of a progressive shortwave trough forecast to move into the
    Pacific Northwest. By early Saturday, the upper ridging is expected
    to extend across the entire High Plains and into Alberta and
    Saskatchewan, with the shortwave trough extending from northwest
    WA/southwest British Columbia through the western Great Basin.

    Frontal band associated with the progressive shortwave will likely
    move onshore early Friday. Some deeper cells are possible within
    this band, but these cells will still be too shallow for lightning
    production. Another period of deeper convection is possible as the
    upper trough and cold mid-level temperatures approach the coast
    Friday afternoon. A few low-topped thunderstorms are possible
    offshore, with a low-probability flash or two possible over
    immediate coastal portions of WA and OR as well.

    ..Mosier.. 01/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 2 17:19:52 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 021719
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 021718

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1118 AM CST Thu Jan 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Sporadic lightning flashes may occur Friday afternoon and evening
    over the coastal Pacific Northwest. Severe weather is not expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    The pattern on Friday will feature an upper trough over the eastern
    CONUS, with a western ridge breaking down late. The shortwave trough responsible for the ridge breakdown will provide rapid cooling aloft
    late in the day from northern CA into western WA and OR, and
    overnight across the Great Basin. Given favorable diurnal
    timing/steepening lapse rates, a few lightning flashes with
    low-topped convection is possible near coastal counties as a cold
    front approaches.

    Elsewhere, high pressure will maintain dry and/or stable conditions
    over land. A few thunderstorms may occur over the northwest Gulf of
    Mexico with a weak low well offshore.

    ..Jewell.. 01/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 3 06:50:54 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 030650
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 030649

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1249 AM CST Fri Jan 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible early Sunday morning across
    parts of the southern and central Plains eastward into the Ozarks.
    No severe weather is expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    A mid-level trough will move from the Intermountain West Saturday
    morning to the southern Plains early Sunday morning. Low-level
    moisture advection will take place across the southern and central
    Plains, ahead of the approaching trough. In response, weak
    instability is expected to develop from southern and eastern Kansas
    southward into Oklahoma. Forecast soundings early Sunday morning
    from southern Kansas into northern Oklahoma suggest MUCAPE could
    approach 500 J/kg. The instability combined with strong large-scale
    ascent should be enough for elevated thunderstorm development late
    in the period. No severe threat is expected.

    ..Broyles.. 01/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 3 17:29:36 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 031729
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 031727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1127 AM CST Fri Jan 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible early Sunday morning across
    parts of the southern and central Plains eastward across the Ozarks.
    No severe weather is expected.

    ...Discussion...
    While a deep upper low will remain over eastern Canada and New
    England Saturday, the main feature aloft associated with the primary
    convective potential will be a short-wave trough initially over the
    Great Basin vicinity. This feature is forecast to strengthen with
    time as it shifts east-southeastward, emerging into the
    central/southern Plains and evolving into a closed low through
    latter stages of the period.

    As this mid/upper trough deepens, a surface low will shift out of
    the southern Rockies and into the southern Plains through the second
    half of the period. By early Sunday morning, this low should be
    crossing western Oklahoma, with a trailing cold front extending west-southwestward across western Texas and a broadening zone of
    low-level warm advection east of the developing low.

    While the low-level airmass across the southern Plains and eastward
    to the Middle and Lower Mississippi Valley should remain stable
    through the period, above-surface theta-e advection may be
    sufficient to permit development of weak elevated CAPE. Showers are
    forecast to increase with time in this zone of warm advection, and
    lightning potential will increase gradually through the second half
    of the period, as quasigeostropic ascent strengthens ahead of the
    advancing system. Greatest potential for some embedded lightning
    within the broader area of weak convection will extend from eastern Kansas/northeastern Oklahoma eastward across the Ozarks, after
    midnight. No severe weather is expected.

    ..Goss.. 01/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 4 07:06:37 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 040706
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 040705

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0105 AM CST Sat Jan 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF LOUISIANA...MISSISSIPPI AND ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms will be possible Sunday afternoon and evening
    from the Sabine River Valley into the lower to mid Mississippi
    Valley and central Gulf Coast states. Severe wind gusts, tornadoes
    and hail will be the primary threats.

    ...Sabine River Valley/Lower to Mid Mississippi Valleys...
    A mid-level trough will move eastward through the southern Plains on
    Sunday, as an associated jet streak translates eastward into the
    Ozarks. At the surface, a low will move across the Ozarks as a cold
    front advances eastward into the lower Mississippi Valley. A moist
    airmass will be located ahead of the front, with moisture advection
    taking place throughout the day. As surface temperatures warm,
    scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop late Sunday morning,
    with storm coverage increasing rapidly by early afternoon. The
    development of a linear MCS is expected as low-level convergence
    couples with strong large-scale ascent along and ahead of the front.


    A severe threat is expected to develop across a broad area Sunday
    afternoon. During the afternoon, NAM forecast soundings from
    southern Arkansas into northern Louisiana and central Mississippi
    increase MLCAPE to around 500 J/kg with 0-6 km shear reaching the 50
    to 60 knot range. Stronger deep-layer shear will be likely as the
    mid-level jet passes through the region during the late afternoon.
    This will be favorable for severe storms, associated with the
    development of a linear MCS. The wind-damage threat will be
    maximized along the leading edge of the line, especially with bowing
    line segments. In addition, 0-3 km storm-relative helicity is
    forecast to peak in the 400 to 500 m2/s2 range ahead of the line,
    suggesting a tornado threat will be likely with any rotating
    elements within the line. If more discrete cells can develop ahead
    of the line, then supercellular tornadoes would also be possible. At
    this time, it appears that the wind-damage threat associated with
    the line will be great enough to warrant upgrading to Enhanced
    across parts of Louisiana, Arkansas and Mississippi.

    ..Broyles.. 01/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 4 17:36:13 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 041736
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 041734

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1134 AM CST Sat Jan 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    NORTHEASTERN LOUISIANA...FAR SOUTHEASTERN ARKANSAS...AND INTO
    WESTERN MISSISSIPPI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong/severe thunderstorms are expected Sunday afternoon and
    evening from the Sabine River Valley into the lower to mid
    Mississippi Valley and central Gulf Coast states. Severe wind gusts,
    tornadoes and hail will be the primary threats.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level closed low -- initially over the western Kansas vicinity
    -- is progged to advance steadily eastward Sunday, reaching the
    Mid-Mississippi Valley area by early Monday. Strong/cyclonic flow
    aloft surrounding this system will shift into/across the Middle and
    Lower Mississippi/Lower Ohio/Tennessee Valleys.

    At the surface, a gradually strengthening surface low will shift
    from the central/eastern Oklahoma vicinity Sunday morning, to the
    Memphis vicinity during the early evening, and eastward into eastern
    Tennessee overnight. Ahead of the low, a warm front will shift
    northward into the Tennessee Valley with time, while a cold front
    sweeps eastward out of eastern Texas through the afternoon, into the
    Delta region through early evening, and across the central Gulf
    Coast states through the end of the period.

    ...East Texas eastward to Mississippi...
    As a surface low shifts eastward out of Oklahoma and into Arkansas
    during the day, southerly low-level warm-sector flow -- and
    associated warm/moist advection -- will contribute to gradual/weak destabilization ahead of the advancing cold front. By early
    afternoon, thunderstorms are forecast to develop near -- and perhaps
    just ahead of -- the cold front, from central Arkansas
    south-southwestward into southeastern Texas, as the airmass modestly destabilizes.

    Very strong shear (flow veering and strengthening with height) will
    support storm organization, with the strongest storms likely
    acquiring rotation -- both within the organizing band of storms, as
    well as with any cellular, warm-advection-driven convection evolving
    ahead of the front. Damaging wind gusts are expected, along with a
    few tornadoes, with risk likely maximized from northern and central
    Louisiana eastward across the Delta region to western Mississippi
    from mid afternoon through mid evening.

    The convection will continue into the overnight hours, as the cold
    front shifts across central Gulf Coast states.
    Diminishing instability suggests a gradual decline in overall severe
    potential overnight. Still, locally damaging gusts and a tornado or
    two will likely remain possible well into the overnight hours.

    ..Goss.. 01/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 5 06:54:48 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 050654
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 050653

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1253 AM CST Sun Jan 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms associated with isolated severe gusts will be possible
    across parts of the Southeast on Monday.

    ...Southeast...
    A mid-level trough will move eastward across the Tennessee Valley
    and central Gulf Coast states on Monday, as a cold front advances
    eastward into the southern Atlantic Coastal states. Thunderstorms
    may be ongoing along and near the front at the start of the period
    from the Florida Panhandle into south-central Georgia. This line of
    convection is forecast to move eastward across the remainder of
    Georgia by early afternoon. The southern end of the line is forecast
    to move across northern Florida during the morning and afternoon.
    Although large-scale ascent and low-level convergence should be
    relatively weak, the line may re-organize somewhat as surface
    heating takes place. Forecast soundings by 21Z on Monday across
    northern Florida have MUCAPE near 500 J/kg and 0-6 km shear in the
    60 to 65 knot range. This could be enough for marginally severe
    gusts, with the stronger components of the line.

    ..Broyles.. 01/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 5 17:21:06 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 051720
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 051719

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1119 AM CST Sun Jan 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    SOUTHERN GEORGIA AND INTO NORTHERN AND WESTERN FLORIDA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms -- a couple of which may be strong to potentially
    severe -- will be possible across parts of the Southeast on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A weakening mid-level short-wave trough is forecast to advance
    quickly eastward across the central and southern Appalachians
    Monday, and then off the Mid-Atlantic Coast Monday night. South of
    this trough, fast westerly flow will prevail across the Gulf Coast
    region.

    An attendant surface low will depart the southern Appalachians and
    cross the Carolinas through the day, moving offshore by early
    evening. A trailing cold front will advance across Georgia and the
    Carolinas through the afternoon, and then southward across the
    Florida Peninsula overnight.

    ...Northern and western Florida into southern Georgia...
    Frontal convection -- including a couple of embedded thunderstorms
    -- will be ongoing from the western Carolinas southwestward to the
    Florida Panhandle and adjacent northern Gulf of Mexico at the start
    of the period, with steady eastward progression to occur through the
    day. The strongest forcing for ascent/mass response will exist from
    the Carolinas northward, where a lack of surface-based instability
    is anticipated. Farther south, meager surface-based instability
    (aided by the presence of low 60s dewpoints ahead of the front) and
    weak convergence along the front suggests generally sub-severe
    convection. However, with a wind field in place that would
    otherwise support organized storms, low-probability potential for a
    few briefly more-organized storms remains evident. As such, will
    maintain low-probability/MRGL risk area for the first half of the
    period.

    ..Goss.. 01/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 6 06:52:56 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 060652
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 060651

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CST Mon Jan 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected over the continental U.S. on Tuesday
    or Tuesday night.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    A mid-level zonal flow regime is forecast over the southeastern
    third of the nation on Tuesday, as a mid-level low closes off over
    the Desert Southwest. At the surface, cold and dry high pressure
    will be present over nearly the entire continental U.S., making
    thunderstorms unlikely Tuesday and Tuesday night.

    ..Broyles.. 01/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 6 17:17:29 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 061717
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 061715

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1115 AM CST Mon Jan 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Tuesday through Tuesday night.

    ...Southwest...
    A positive-tilt shortwave trough will close off over the Lower CO
    Valley into the northern Gulf of CA vicinity by early Wednesday. The
    lobe of ascent downstream of the trough should largely become
    centered across eastern AZ on Tuesday night. Amid rather steep
    mid-level lapse rates, minimal elevated buoyancy emanating from
    below-freezing parcels should develop. While scattered light showers
    should occur, thunder probabilities appear below 10 percent.

    ..Grams.. 01/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 7 06:36:06 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 070635
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 070634

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1234 AM CST Tue Jan 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms will be possible Wednesday night across parts
    of west and central Texas.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    At mid-levels, southwesterly anticyclonic will be in place on
    Wednesday across the southern High Plains as a low moves through
    northwestern Mexico. Ahead of this system, warm advection will
    develop across the southern Plains as a low-level jet strengthens
    Wednesday night. Near this jet, lift may become strong enough for
    isolated thunderstorm development across parts of west and central
    Texas. Instability is expected to be minimal, and no severe threat
    is expected.

    ..Broyles.. 01/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 7 17:23:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 071723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 071722

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1122 AM CST Tue Jan 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Very isolated thunderstorms will be possible Wednesday night across
    parts of west Texas.

    ...West TX...
    A closed mid/upper low will drift southeast across the Gulf of CA
    vicinity. Downstream of this wave, warm-moist advection at 700 mb
    should eventually yield scant buoyancy with mixed-phase states in
    elevated parcels amid steep mid-level lapse rates. Isolated
    convection should develop overnight Wednesday into early Thursday,
    most of which should occur atop sub-freezing wet-bulb temperatures
    near the surface. Some of this elevated convection may yield very
    isolated thunder coverage near 10 percent.

    ..Grams.. 01/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 8 06:54:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 080654
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 080653

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1253 AM CST Wed Jan 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible on Thursday from parts of
    central Texas southeastward across the Texas Coastal Plain, and
    eastward into far southwest Louisiana. No severe threat is expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    A mid-level trough over the southern and central Rockies will move
    into the central High Plains on Thursday, as southwest mid-level
    flow remains over the southern Plains. At low-levels, a cold airmass
    will be in place throughout the southern Plains. Over the top of
    this airmass, warm advection will likely strengthen as the system to
    the west approaches. An associated low-level jet is forecast to
    consolidate over the Texas Coastal Plain during the day. Lift and
    moisture associated with this feature could be sufficient for
    isolated thunderstorm development. Forecast soundings on Thursday
    from the Texas Hill Country to the western Gulf Coast have
    instability primarily above 800 mb, with MUCAPE up to around 100
    J/kg. This could be enough for a few elevated storms, but no severe
    threat is expected.

    ..Broyles.. 01/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 8 17:04:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 081704
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 081703

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1103 AM CST Wed Jan 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not forecast through Thursday night.

    ...TX/LA...
    A northern-stream shortwave impulse should phase with an initially
    closed mid/upper low in the Gulf of CA vicinity, yielding a longwave
    trough from south-central Canada to northwest Mexico by Thursday
    night. Downstream low-level warm-moist advection will foster
    increasingly widespread precipitation across the South-Central
    States on Thursday as a surface cyclone becomes established off the
    western Gulf Coast. Despite ample precipitation coverage, overall
    thunder potential appears low.

    Very isolated, elevated thunder will be possible over a broad
    portion of central to east TX, mainly during the morning and
    afternoon. Elevated buoyancy should be scant at most, and
    mid/upper-level temperatures will gradually warm, weakening lapse
    rates later in the period. Primary convective potential will be
    focused over the northwest Gulf where 12Z HREF members are
    consistent with an offshore QLCS forming Thursday evening and
    broadening Thursday night. The northern extent of this may skim
    parts of coastal LA as the surface cyclone approaches overnight.
    Forecast soundings suggest this convection should remain shallow
    over land, with minimal chance for charge separation despite the
    potential intrusion of low 60s surface dew points. But given fast
    low to mid-level wind fields, strong surface gusts might accompany
    the convective line.

    ..Grams.. 01/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 9 06:57:51 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 090657
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 090656

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1256 AM CST Thu Jan 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms may develop on Friday across parts of the
    central Gulf Coast but no severe threat is expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    At mid-levels, a trough will move across the southern Plains on
    Friday as west-southwesterly flow remains in place across the
    Southeast. At the surface, a low and associated cold front will move
    eastward along the central Gulf Coast. Ahead of the front, surface
    dewpoints are expected to be in the 50s F inland, and in the 60s F
    southward across the northern Gulf of Mexico. Surface heating within
    this moist airmass overland will remain very limited, keeping
    instability at a minimum. For this reason, no severe threat is
    expected on Friday.

    ..Broyles.. 01/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 9 17:05:23 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 091705
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 091703

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1103 AM CST Thu Jan 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected through Friday night.

    ...Southeast LA to the FL Panhandle...
    A shallow/thin band of enhanced showers is expected to be ongoing at
    12Z Friday across the southeast LA vicinity. The northeast extent of
    scant buoyancy, MUCAPE near 100 J/kg, should spread across the mouth
    of the MS River into a portion of the north-central Gulf in
    conjunction with a weak surface cyclone tracking east along the
    coast. With an elongated, positive-tilt longwave trough displaced to
    the north/west, mid-level lapse rates will remain weak and
    upper-level temperatures will be relatively warm. Thus, potential
    for charge separation appears nearly negligible. Still, with a plume
    of low to mid 60s surface dew points impinging on the coast and
    offshore waters, mixing of fast low-level flow may yield strong
    gusts with the shallow convective line. This line should eventually
    decay in the northeast Gulf vicinity by evening.

    ..Grams.. 01/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 10 06:26:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 100625
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 100624

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1224 AM CST Fri Jan 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Saturday or Saturday night.

    ...Synopsis...

    Surface high pressure will deepen and spread east/northeast across
    much of the South and Midwest on Saturday in the wake of a prior
    cold frontal passage. This will result in a dearth of boundary layer
    moisture, with dry and stable conditions precluding thunderstorm
    activity.

    ..Leitman.. 01/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 10 16:28:33 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 101628
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 101626

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1026 AM CST Fri Jan 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Saturday or Saturday night.

    ...Synopsis...
    Conditions will be too dry/stable for potential lightning-producing
    convection across the CONUS through the period.

    ..Grams.. 01/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 11 06:26:44 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 110626
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 110624

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1224 AM CST Sat Jan 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated, non-severe thunderstorms are possible near coastal
    southeast Louisiana during the early morning Monday.

    ...Synopsis...

    A shortwave embedded in the larger-scale upper trough over the
    central U.S. will move from northern Mexico into the Southeast on
    Sunday. This will allow for weak surface low development over the
    northwest Gulf, offshore from LA, during the overnight hours.
    Low-level warm advection ahead of these feature will allow for
    modest boundary-layer moisture to impinge on the north-central Gulf
    Coast late in the period. Modest midlevel lapse rates amid a
    saturated vertical profile will support meager elevated instability,
    supporting a few thunderstorms approaching the southeast LA coast
    early Monday morning.

    ..Leitman.. 01/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 11 16:51:46 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 111651
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 111649

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1049 AM CST Sat Jan 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Weak thunderstorm activity is possible near southeastern Louisiana
    coastal areas Sunday night. Otherwise, the risk for thunderstorms
    will remain negligible across much of the the nation through this
    period.

    ...Discussion...
    Downstream of amplifying mid/upper ridging offshore of the U.S.
    Pacific coast, models indicate that a belt of cyclonic flow,
    initially encompassing much of western into central North America,
    will become increasingly split. One embedded short wave
    perturbation, emerging from the Intermountain West today, is
    forecast to accelerate through an increasingly confluent regime
    across the Great Lakes into Northeast, in advance of a mid-level
    closed low digging south-southwest of Hudson Bay into the Minnesota international border vicinity by 12Z Monday. Another one or two
    digging upstream perturbations may contribute to further
    amplification of mid-level troughing across California through the
    Southwest, northern Mexican Plateau and Rio Grande Valley vicinity.

    Downstream of this troughing, it appears that large-scale mid-level
    ridging will build across much of the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico
    into the Southeast. As this occurs, a lower/mid-tropospheric low,
    currently near or just south of the Baja Peninsula, is forecast to
    become increasingly deformed and weaken while accelerating
    northeastward through an increasingly confluent regime across the
    western Gulf/Gulf coast vicinity through the southern Appalachians
    Sunday through Sunday night.

    Beneath this regime, while a seasonably cold and stable environment
    now established across much of the nation will generally be
    maintained, models indicate that lower/mid-tropospheric warming on
    southerly return flow will develop across the northwestern Gulf of
    Mexico into the Southeast. It appears that this will be accompanied
    by moistening emanating from a modifying Gulf boundary-layer, and
    increasing precipitation within an evolving plume of large-scale
    ascent. Based on forecast soundings, this may include convection
    capable of producing lightning as far north as north central Gulf
    coastal areas by late Sunday evening into Sunday night.

    ..Kerr.. 01/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 12 05:54:47 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 120554
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 120553

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1153 PM CST Sat Jan 11 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected across most of the U.S. on Monday.
    However, an isolated thunderstorm or two may approach the north-central/northeast Gulf Coast.

    ...Synopsis...

    Moderate to strong deep-layer southwesterly flow will persist across
    much of the eastern half of the CONUS on Monday. A weak surface
    low/trough is forecast to move across the northeast Gulf of Mexico,
    with a warm front remaining offshore the central and northeast Gulf
    coast. This will keep deeper boundary-layer moisture offshore.
    However, modest midlevel lapse rates amid a saturated thermodynamic
    profile in the midlevel will support minor elevated instability
    (generally less than 150 J/kg) from the mouth of the MS River
    eastward toward the FL Big Bend vicinity. While most thunderstorm
    activity is expected to remain offshore, a few thunderstorms may
    approach the coast or near-shore waters. Severe thunderstorms are
    not expected.

    ..Leitman.. 01/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 12 17:03:30 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 121703
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 121701

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1101 AM CST Sun Jan 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The risk for thunderstorms appears negligible across much of the
    U.S. Monday through Monday night.

    ...Discussion...
    Models indicate that a more prominent, blocking mid-level ridge will
    continue to evolve offshore of the U.S. Pacific coast into the
    Pacific Northwest during this period. As this occurs, it still
    appears that a digging downstream short wave perturbation will begin
    to contribute to the evolution of a closed low offshore of the
    southern California/northern Baja coast. Farther downstream, little
    change is forecast to expansive ridging centered over the Caribbean,
    although a weak perturbation may contribute to subtle mid-level
    height falls on its northern periphery as it accelerates across and
    east of the southern Atlantic coast vicinity. As a much more
    vigorous short wave impulse (emerging from the northern
    mid-latitudes) digs southeastward across the Upper Midwest,
    mid-level flow appears likely to become increasingly confluent east
    of the Rockies through the Appalachians.

    Beneath the confluent regime, it appears that expansive cold surface
    ridging will continue to build, with one prominent high developing
    southward across the northeastern Great Plains. Another may slowly
    shift east-southeastward across the southern Great Plains/lower
    Mississippi Valley vicinity, with the leading edge of the cold
    intrusion overspreading much of the northern Gulf of Mexico and
    northern Florida Peninsula Monday through Monday night. Within a
    remnant plume of preceding low-level moisture return off a modifying
    Gulf boundary-layer, it appears that convective development will be
    maintained into Monday, before supporting large-scale forcing for
    ascent weakens and/or shifts eastward off the south Atlantic coast.
    Models continue to suggest that thermodynamic profiles conducive to
    lightning will generally remain confined to the northeastern Gulf of
    Mexico. However, it is possible that some of this activity could
    approach coastal areas near/north of Tampa Bay before weakening.

    ..Kerr.. 01/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 13 06:19:24 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 130619
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 130617

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1217 AM CST Mon Jan 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Tuesday.

    ...Synopsis...

    Strong surface high pressure will persist across much of the CONUS
    on Tuesday. Meanwhile, a cold front will permeate well south of the
    U.S. Gulf Coast into the southern Gulf of Mexico. A dearth of
    boundary-layer moisture will result in dry/stable conditions, and
    thunderstorms are not expected.

    ..Leitman.. 01/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 13 17:19:01 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 131718
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 131717

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1117 AM CST Mon Jan 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Tuesday.

    ...Discussion...
    An upper trough with strong positive tilt will continue to prevail
    across the U.S. Tuesday. At the surface, a cold front over southern
    Florida will continue shifting slowly southward and eventually
    offshore, while a second/weak front -- at the leading edge of a
    reinforcing intrusion of arctic air -- shifts southeastward across
    the Northeast/Midwest/Plains states.

    A weak upper disturbance -- embedded in fast westerly flow aloft --
    is forecast to shift across northern Mexico and Deep South Texas,
    and on into the western Gulf of Mexico late. A few showers -- and
    possibly a lightning flash or two -- cannot be ruled out over parts
    of South Texas -- most likely near the coast or offshore.
    Elsewhere, thunderstorms are not expected as cold/continental air
    prevails across much of the CONUS.

    ..Goss.. 01/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 14 06:30:34 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 140630
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 140628

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 AM CST Tue Jan 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Minimal to no lightning is expected across the U.S. on Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis...

    Strong surface high pressure from the Rockies into the southern
    Plains and Southeast will maintain a dry and stable airmass across
    most of the CONUS. This will preclude inland thunderstorm activity
    for the most part. However, a few lightning flashes are possible
    just offshore, or perhaps near the immediate coast of south Texas,
    in the vicinity of weak surface low near the Lower Texas Coast.
    Coverage is expected to remain less than 10 percent, negating the
    need for a 10 percent general thunderstorm delineation.

    ..Leitman.. 01/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 14 17:15:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 141715
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 141714

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1114 AM CST Tue Jan 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Minimal to no lightning is expected across the U.S. on Wednesday.

    ...Discussion...
    A mid-level short-wave trough moving southeastward across the Plains
    states Wednesday will contribute to amplification of the broader troughing/cyclonic flow over the eastern U.S. through the period.
    As this occurs, surface high pressure representing cold/dry
    continental air will prevail across much of the country through
    Thursday morning.

    Given the cool/dry/stable air dominating the country, thunderstorms
    are largely precluded. An exception will be over coastal South
    Texas, where weak CAPE atop a deep/stable boundary layer will
    support scattered showers, and potentially a few lightning flashes.
    However, with coverage of any lightning still expected to remain
    quite limited, no thunder area will be added at this time.

    ..Goss.. 01/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 15 06:17:19 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 150617
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 150615

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1215 AM CST Wed Jan 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...

    Upper shortwave ridging will spread east from the Plains into the
    Midwest on Thursday. This will occur as two shortwave upper troughs
    move across the Southwest and into the northern Plains/Upper Midwest
    by early Friday. At the surface, a deepening low will shift east
    across the Canadian Prairies, with an attending surface trough
    extending southward through much of the U.S. Plains states.
    Meanwhile, surface high pressure will remain over the Southeast, and
    Gulf moisture will remain suppressed will south of the U.S. Gulf
    coast. A cool, dry and stable airmass over much of the country will
    preclude thunderstorm potential.

    ..Leitman.. 01/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 15 17:24:24 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 151724
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 151722

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1122 AM CST Wed Jan 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Thursday.

    ...Discussion...
    An upper trough over the eastern U.S. will advance slowly eastward
    Thursday, while the next feature -- a short-wave trough over western
    Canada -- digs southeastward, moving into the
    northwestern/north-central U.S. overnight.

    At the surface, cold/dry/stable conditions will persist. A
    pronounced cold front, associated with the digging/western upper
    system, will likewise shift southeastward out of Canada, but
    preceding high pressure will preclude thunder potential ahead of the
    front -- and elsewhere across the CONUS.

    ..Goss.. 01/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 16 06:39:27 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 160639
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 160637

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1237 AM CST Thu Jan 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across the Lower Mississippi and
    Tennessee Valleys, and central Gulf Coast region Friday night into
    early Saturday morning.

    ...Synopsis...

    A shortwave upper trough will develop eastward from the southern
    Plains to the Southeast on Friday. As this occurs, an intense
    midlevel jet streak will overspread the Gulf coast states. A weak surface/trough will likely track from OK/TX to the Lower MS Valley,
    with an attendant cold front tracking southeast across the region
    through early Saturday.

    Southerly low-level flow will allow for some modified Gulf moisture
    to return northward from East TX to the central Gulf coast. Low 60s
    F dewpoints are expected to remain confined near the coast, with 50s
    F dewpoints reaching roughly as far north as southern AR into
    central MS/AL during the evening and overnight hours. Forecast
    soundings indicate the boundary-layer will remain capped, limiting
    surface instability. However, steepening midlevel lapse rates will
    support modest elevated instability (MLCAPE less than 500 J/kg).
    Isolated elevated thunderstorm will be possible from near the Sabine
    River into parts of the central Gulf coast states Friday evening
    into early Saturday morning ahead of the advancing cold front. Poor thermodynamics will limit overall severe thunderstorm potential.
    However, strong forcing and an increasing low-level jet ahead of the
    front could be sufficient amid weak elevated instability to support
    a briefly strong storm or two producing gusty winds from southeast
    LA to far southern MS/AL, and the western FL Panhandle vicinity.

    ..Leitman.. 01/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 16 17:22:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 161722
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 161721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1121 AM CST Thu Jan 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across the Lower Mississippi and
    Tennessee Valleys, and central Gulf Coast region Friday night into
    early Saturday morning.

    ...Synopsis...
    A short-wave trough digging southeastward out of western Canada
    across the north-central U.S. will partially phase with a second
    trough moving out of the Desert Southwest across the southern
    Plains, resulting in evolution of large-scale troughing across the
    CONUS. By Saturday morning, highly amplified cyclonic flow is
    forecast to encompass nearly the entirety of North America.

    At the surface, a deep cyclone associated with the upper troughing,
    initially over western Ontario, is forecast to occlude as it rotates northeastward across the James Bay area. A trailing cold front will
    sweep across the Plains/Upper Great Lakes/Midwest, and should reach
    a position from Lower Michigan southwestward to the Lower
    Mississippi Valley by 18/12Z (Saturday morning).

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley/central Gulf Coast area...
    As a cold front advances southeastward toward, and eventually into,
    the lower Mississippi Valley area, low-level warm advection atop a
    still cool/stable warm-sector boundary layer will lead to
    development of elevated convection, mainly during the second half of
    the period. As convection evolves, and low-level theta-e advection
    supports continued/modest elevated destabilization, a few
    thunderstorms will likely develop.

    While strengthening flow aloft during the period will result in
    shear that would otherwise support organized storms, the combination
    of a boundary layer not conducive for surface-based storms, and weak instability aloft, suggests that severe threat should remain no more
    than minimal at best across this region.

    ..Goss.. 01/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 17 05:51:12 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 170550
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 170548

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1148 PM CST Thu Jan 16 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorms may occur over parts of the Southeast on
    Saturday. Severe thunderstorm potential is forecast to remain low.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A southern stream speed max will extend from TX and northern Mexico
    across the central Gulf Coast on Saturday, and will eventually phase
    with a developing full-latitude trough late. A cold front will push
    across the southeastern states during the day, and southwest surface
    winds will bring lower 60 F dewpoints inland as far north as
    southern GA. Meanwhile, mid 60s F may be present along the Gulf
    Coast. Just above the surface, winds around 850 mb will already be
    strong and veered to nearly due westerly, which will tend to bring
    drying aloft.

    That said, the initial warm advection regime ahead of the cold front
    may support scattered thunderstorms from early to midday across
    parts of AL, GA, and northern FL. Despite the increasing low-level
    moisture, the boundary layer will remain relatively cool, with less-than-optimal lapse rates. However, lift along the front as well
    as the strong flow could conditionally support locally strong gusts.
    At this time, uncertainty regarding air mass destabilization
    precludes any low severe probabilities.

    Otherwise, a very large upper trough will continue to develop across
    much of the CONUS, with cyclonic flow aloft extending from coast to
    coast by Sunday morning, providing cool/stable conditions.

    ..Jewell.. 01/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 17 17:19:38 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 171719
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 171717

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1117 AM CST Fri Jan 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorms may occur over parts of the Southeast on
    Saturday. Severe thunderstorm potential is forecast to remain low.

    ...Northern Florida/Florida Panhandle...
    A large upper-level trough will amplify through the period on
    Saturday with eventual phasing of the southern stream and polar jet
    across the Southeast by 12Z Sunday. Low-level flow will be mostly
    weak through the day Saturday which will keep better low-level
    moisture offshore. Saturday night, low-level flow will start to
    strengthen which may bring mid 60s dewpoints inland across the
    Florida Panhandle and northern Florida Peninsula. As the upper-level
    jet phases and consolidates, a surface low will start to deepen
    across the Southeast with a sharpening cold front. Thunderstorm
    activity is expected in the vicinity of this front Saturday night
    into early Sunday. If any storms can remain along or ahead of the
    surface front, a strong to isolated severe storm may be possible.
    However, the orientation of the front would seem to favor mostly
    anafrontal convection. Given the relatively weak instability
    forecast, elevated thunderstorms will likely not pose any severe
    weather threat despite the strongly sheared environment.

    ..Bentley.. 01/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 18 05:11:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 180511
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180510

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1110 PM CST Fri Jan 17 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS DURING THE DAY
    ACROSS CENTRAL FL...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated wind damage and an isolated tornado will be possible during
    the day across central Florida.

    ...Central FL during the day Sunday...
    Within a large-scale trough over much of the CONUS, an embedded
    mid-upper jet streak will move over the Southeast and off the
    Atlantic coast, as an associated surface cold front progresses
    southeastward across the FL peninsula during the day. Some increase
    in low-level moisture is expected ahead of the front during the day,
    with boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s and temperatures in the
    70s. However, midlevel lapse rates will be poor and buoyancy will
    remain limited (MLCAPE will likely peak in the 500-750 J/kg range).
    The combination of weak buoyancy and sufficiently long, relatively
    straight hodographs will support low potential for organized storms
    in a band along the cold front, perhaps with strong outflow gusts.

    ..Thompson.. 01/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 18 06:00:11 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 180600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180558

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1158 PM CST Fri Jan 17 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS DURING THE DAY
    ACROSS CENTRAL FL...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated wind damage and an isolated tornado will be possible during
    the day across central Florida.

    ...Central FL during the day Sunday...
    Within a large-scale trough over much of the CONUS, an embedded
    mid-upper jet streak will move over the Southeast and off the
    Atlantic coast, as an associated surface cold front progresses
    southeastward across the FL peninsula during the day. Some increase
    in low-level moisture is expected ahead of the front during the day,
    with boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s and temperatures in the
    70s. However, midlevel lapse rates will be poor and buoyancy will
    remain limited (MLCAPE will likely peak in the 500-750 J/kg range).
    The combination of weak buoyancy and sufficiently long, relatively
    straight hodographs will support low potential for organized storms
    in a band along the cold front, perhaps with strong outflow gusts.

    ..Thompson.. 01/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 18 06:37:12 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 180637
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180635

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1235 AM CST Sat Jan 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS DURING THE DAY
    ACROSS CENTRAL FL...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated wind damage and an isolated tornado will be possible during
    the day across central Florida.

    ...Central FL during the day Sunday...
    Within a large-scale trough over much of the CONUS, an embedded
    mid-upper jet streak will move over the Southeast and off the
    Atlantic coast, as an associated surface cold front progresses
    southeastward across the FL peninsula during the day. Some increase
    in low-level moisture is expected ahead of the front during the day,
    with boundary-layer dewpoints in the 60s and temperatures in the
    70s. However, midlevel lapse rates will be poor and buoyancy will
    remain limited (MLCAPE will likely peak in the 500-750 J/kg range).
    The combination of weak buoyancy and sufficiently long, relatively
    straight hodographs will support low potential for organized storms
    in a band along the cold front, perhaps with strong outflow gusts.

    ..Thompson.. 01/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 18 17:13:46 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 181713
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 181712

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1112 AM CST Sat Jan 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN CENTRAL FL...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A tornado and isolated damaging winds will be possible across
    central Florida through Sunday afternoon.

    ...Central FL...
    Within a longwave upper trough over much of the CONUS, an intense
    mid-level jet streak will move across parts of the Southeast and off
    the Mid-Atlantic coast by 12Z Monday. Primary surface cyclone will
    deepen as it advances off the Carolina Coastal Plain by Sunday
    afternoon. An attendant cold front will trail southwestward and move
    south across the FL Peninsula through the period.

    Relatively rich low-level moisture ahead of the front will yield a
    plume of upper 60s surface dew points, coinciding with temperatures
    warming into the 70s during the day. Buoyancy will remain weak,
    MLCAPE below 1000 J/kg, as mid-level lapse rates remain subdued and
    poorer with southern extent across the peninsula. Nearly
    unidirectional southwesterly wind profiles with pronounced speed
    shear will yield moderate low-level hodograph curvature and
    elongated/straight mid/upper hodographs. This should result in
    potential for a couple supercells during the morning into the
    afternoon, despite the wind profile largely paralleling the surface
    front. With large-scale ascent weakening through the day, convective
    coverage should peak at isolated to scattered around midday before
    waning into late afternoon. Overall setup appears supportive of a low-probability threat for a tornado and locally strong gusts.

    ..Grams.. 01/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 19 06:34:49 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 190634
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 190633

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1233 AM CST Sun Jan 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected Monday or Monday night.

    ...Synopsis...
    A large upper trough will stretch from coast to coast across the
    CONUS, with the upper low near James Bay. The strong northwest flow
    aloft across the Rockies and Plains will maintain influxes of high
    pressure, providing cool and stable surface conditions over the bulk
    of the CONUS. While minimal moisture or weak instability may exist
    north of the cold front into southern FL, poor lapse rates aloft
    should prove hostile to even weak elevated thunderstorm potential.

    ..Jewell.. 01/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 19 17:19:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 191719
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 191718

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1118 AM CST Sun Jan 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast on Monday or Monday night.

    ...Synopsis...
    Thunderstorm potential is negligible across the CONUS on Monday
    through Monday night. One exception could be from the Middle TX to
    southwest LA Gulf Coast where weak elevated convection should
    develop early morning Tuesday. This will occur with strengthening
    warm-moist advection centered on 750-700 mb, downstream of a
    positive-tilt mid/upper-level longwave trough. Some CAM/non-CAM 12Z
    forecast soundings, most aggressively from the NAM, depict scant
    elevated buoyancy developing amid a plume of initially steep
    mid-level lapse rates. With thermodynamic profiles suggestive of a
    predominant PTYPE of sleet at the surface, these potentially
    mixed-phase elevated parcels could support a few lightning flashes.
    While thunderstorm probabilities may be nonzero, they appear to be
    less than 10 percent at this time.

    ..Grams.. 01/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 20 05:50:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 200550
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 200549

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1149 PM CST Sun Jan 19 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast on Tuesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A large positive-tilt upper trough will stretch from the upper Great
    Lakes into the southern High Plains Tuesday morning, and will
    progress toward the East Coast by 12Z Wednesday. Behind this wave,
    another lobe of vorticity will drop south across the Rockies and
    toward the Plains late.

    At the surface, a strong high pressure ridge will extend from the
    Great Basin all the way to the Mid Atlantic Tuesday morning, with
    this high consolidating across the eastern states and toward the
    lower MS Valley overnight. Another area of high pressure will
    develop southward across the Pacific Northwest and northern Rockies,
    in association with the second upper wave.

    While 60s F dewpoints will remain from the FL Straits toward the
    Bahamas, little destabilization is expected over the mainland.
    Thunderstorms may occur over parts of the central Gulf of Mexico
    along the surging cold front, with little impact to land expected.

    ..Jewell.. 01/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 20 17:04:01 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 201703
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 201702

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1102 AM CST Mon Jan 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast on Tuesday through Tuesday night.

    ...Synopsis...
    Thunder potential will be nil across much of the CONUS during the D2
    period. Deep convection will be relegated to the Gulf, initially
    over the west-central portion before spreading towards the southeast
    part late. The slimmest of elevated buoyancy (MUCAPE below 100 J/kg)
    along the Upper TX to LA Gulf Coast may coincide with mixed-phase
    parcels, supporting weak convection into late morning. A few
    lightning flashes are possible along the immediate coast, but the
    overall thunder probability appears to be less than 10 percent.

    As deep convection progresses east across the Gulf, it is expected
    to wane with approach to southwest FL and the Keys early Wednesday
    morning. This decaying phase should occur in response poor mid-level
    lapse rates downstream of a positive-tilt trough and subsiding
    large-scale ascent.

    ..Grams.. 01/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 21 04:51:23 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 210450
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 210448

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1048 PM CST Mon Jan 20 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A large upper trough will remain over all but the westernmost CONUS
    on Wednesday, with a leading trough exiting the East Coast early in
    the day. At that time, high pressure will firmly be in place over
    the East, with strong north winds over the Gulf of Mexico and
    western Atlantic. A weak surface low may develop along the front
    over the Bahamas, but low-level moisture and instability is forecast
    to remain off the FL Peninsula.

    Behind this system, another upper trough will develop out of the
    Rockies and into the central states, with another strong area of
    high pressure centered over the Intermountain West into Thursday
    morning. The cool and/or stable air mass over land will thus
    maintain little if any chance of thunderstorms through the period.

    ..Jewell.. 01/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 21 17:26:21 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 211726
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 211724

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1124 AM CST Tue Jan 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A deep mid/upper-level trough will remain in place over most of the
    CONUS on Wednesday. Anomalously cold conditions are expected from
    the Great Plains to the Eastern Seaboard, in the wake of a strong
    cold front. Weak MUCAPE may persist across far south FL and the Keys
    very early in the forecast period, but deep convection appears
    unlikely due to warm temperatures aloft and decreasing large-scale
    ascent with time. Elsewhere, dry and stable conditions will limit
    thunderstorm potential.

    ..Dean.. 01/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 22 05:48:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 220548
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 220547

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1147 PM CST Tue Jan 21 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A cool and stable pattern will persist on Thursday across the CONUS,
    with a sprawling area of high pressure stretching from the Great
    Basin to the East Coast. An elongated, positive-tilt upper trough
    will extend from Quebec southwestward across the Great Lakes and
    into the southern High Plains by 00Z, and will move toward the MS
    Valley into Friday morning.

    Given high pressure at the surface, and generally dry westerly flow
    above the stable surface layer over the Southeast, thunderstorms
    remain unlikely.

    ..Jewell.. 01/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 22 17:19:21 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 221719
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 221717

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1117 AM CST Wed Jan 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper trough near the Four Corners will shift east toward the
    Lower MS Valley and western Gulf vicinity on Thursday. A swath of
    strong southwesterly mid/upper flow accompanying this system will
    overspread much of the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic vicinity. Strong,
    sprawling surface high pressure and cold temperatures will envelop
    much of the CONUS, resulting in a dry and stable boundary layer.
    This will preclude thunderstorm activity on Thursday.

    ..Leitman.. 01/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 23 06:27:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 230627
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 230626

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1226 AM CST Thu Jan 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast for Friday.

    ...Synopsis...
    An elongated positive-tilt upper trough will extend from the lower
    Great Lakes into the lower MS Valley Friday morning, and will
    quickly move to the East Coast by evening. Behind this trough, zonal
    flow will develop across much of central and southern CONUS,
    allowing warming aloft.

    High pressure will move from the Plains into the eastern states
    through the period, prolonging dry offshore winds across much of the
    Southeast. While southerly low-level flow will develop late across
    the western Gulf and into TX, instability supportive of
    thunderstorms is not forecast this early in the return cycle.

    Elsewhere, another large lobe of vorticity will rotate southward
    across the northern Rockies and Pacific NW during the day, into the
    Great Basin by Saturday morning. Temperatures aloft will be cold,
    but little instability is forecast to support any
    convection/lightning.

    ..Jewell.. 01/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 23 17:20:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 231719
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 231718

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1118 AM CST Thu Jan 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast for Friday.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper trough from the Great Lakes to the western Gulf will shift
    east, moving offshore the Atlantic coast by Saturday morning.
    Meanwhile, low-amplitude westerly flow will emerge east of the
    Rockies in the wake of the upper trough as another trough begins to
    dig across the western U.S. late in the period. At the surface, high
    pressure over the eastern U.S., and across the northern Rockies,
    will maintain a dry and stable airmass, precluding thunderstorm
    activity.

    ..Leitman.. 01/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 24 07:02:02 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 240701
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 240659

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CST Fri Jan 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible in parts of
    central and east Texas Saturday night.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    West to west-southwest mid-level flow will be in place across the
    southern U.S from Saturday into Saturday night. Beneath this flow, a
    belt of strong low-level flow will be in place across parts of
    central and east Texas. In response, low-level moisture return is
    forecast to take place across parts of the Texas Coastal Plain
    throughout the day into the overnight period. After midnight, lift
    along the western edge of the low-level jet may be conducive to
    isolated to scattered thunderstorm development. However, instability
    is forecast to remain weak and no severe threat expected to develop.

    ..Broyles.. 01/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 24 17:09:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 241709
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 241707

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1107 AM CST Fri Jan 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible in parts of
    central and east Texas, into northwest Louisiana, Saturday night.

    ...Synopsis...

    Low-amplitude west/southwesterly mid/upper flow is forecast across
    much of the CONUS east of the Rockies on Saturday. Overnight, a
    south/southwest low-level jet will increase across parts of TX
    toward the ArkLaTex vicinity. Southerly low-level flow across the
    western Gulf will transport moisture northward across portions of
    the TX coast and Sabine Valley. Dewpoints near 60 F will remain
    confined to the immediate coastal vicinity with upper 40s to low 50s
    F dewpoints further north across east TX and central/northern LA.
    Increasing ascent in association with the aforementioned low-level
    jet may be sufficient for the development of isolated thunderstorm
    within weak elevated instability late Saturday night into early
    Sunday. Severe thunderstorms are not expected.

    ..Leitman.. 01/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 25 06:59:15 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 250659
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 250657

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1257 AM CST Sat Jan 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible from Sunday
    into Sunday night from the Texas Coastal Plain into the lower
    Mississippi Valley, but no severe threat is expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    Zonal westerly mid-level flow will be in place across the Southeast
    on Sunday, as a belt of strong low-level flow remains over the
    western Gulf Coast. At the surface, a cold front will advance
    southward into the lower Mississippi Valley and Texas Coastal Plain.
    Ahead of the front, surface dewpoints are forecast to be in the 60s
    F. Due to widespread cloud cover, surface heating ahead of the front
    is expected to be minimal, and instability should remain weak during
    the day. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms appear likely to
    develop near the front on Thursday from the Texas Coastal Plain into
    southern Louisiana, but weak instability should be unfavorable for
    severe storms. This storms are forecast to move eastward into the
    lower Mississippi Valley during the evening and overnight period.

    ..Broyles.. 01/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Jan 25 17:10:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 251710
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 251708

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1108 AM CST Sat Jan 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible from Sunday
    into Sunday night from the Texas Coastal Plain into the lower
    Mississippi Valley, as well as portions of the California coastline.
    No severe threat is expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A vertically stacked cyclone will meander along the California
    coastline as a positively tilted mid-level trough traverses the
    eastern U.S., and ridging aloft builds into the southern Plains
    tomorrow (Sunday). Some deepening of the eastern upper trough will
    encourage low-level WAA across portions of eastern TX into the
    Southeast, where an increase and both moisture and lift will support
    scattered thunderstorm development. 7-8 C/km lapse rates
    overspreading portions of eastern TX may support isolated bouts of
    small hail in the stronger updrafts given 40-50 kts of deep-layer
    speed shear.

    Along the CA coastline, adequate surface heating amid the stacked
    cyclone will result in surface temperatures reaching the low to mid
    50s F in spots. Boundary layer mixing will support 7-8 C/km
    low-level lapse rates, with 0-3 km CAPE reaching the 100-150 J/kg
    range. Though convection should be low-topped, updrafts may become
    just deep enough to foster liquid/ice phase mixing and subsequent
    charge separation needed for isolated lightning flashes.
    Furthermore, the more robust updrafts benefiting from locally higher
    0-3 km CAPE beneath the stacked cyclone may have enough vertical
    vorticity to work with such that a brief landspout cannot be
    completely ruled out. However, confidence in this scenario is too
    low to support severe probabilities at this time.

    ..Squitieri.. 01/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 26 06:57:28 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 260656
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 260654

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1254 AM CST Sun Jan 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms will be possible on Monday in the lower
    Mississippi Valley and in southern California, but no severe threat
    is expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    A mid-level trough will move across the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys
    on Monday, as a cold front advances southward across the lower
    Mississippi Valley. Isolated thunderstorms may be ongoing near the
    start of the period along or near the front. Further west, a
    mid-level low will move southward along the coast of southern
    California. Isolated lightning strikes could occur near the low. No
    severe threat is expected across the continental U.S. on Monday or
    Monday night.

    ..Broyles.. 01/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jan 26 17:15:23 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 261715
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 261713

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1113 AM CST Sun Jan 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms will be possible Monday morning in the lower
    Mississippi Valley, southern California, and portions of the lower
    Colorado Valley. Severe weather potential remains quite low.

    ...Synopsis...
    A large upper-level trough will remain across much of the East into
    parts of the Midwest tomorrow. A cold front will move into the Gulf
    of Mexico. Farther west, a broad upper low will move through
    southern California and into the Southwest.

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Showers and isolated thunderstorms are expected to be ongoing early
    Monday morning within a weak elevated buoyancy environment. This
    activity will continue into mid/late morning before low-level
    convergence/warm advection weakens.

    ...Southern California into Lower Colorado Valley...
    Cold temperatures aloft and modest mid-level ascent will promote
    showers and isolated embedded thunderstorms from the southern
    California coast into parts of the lower Colorado Valley. Most of
    this activity will occur during the early to late morning.
    Thereafter, forcing for ascent should weaken and slight mid-level
    warming should reduce what will already be minimal buoyancy to
    negligible levels.

    ..Wendt.. 01/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 27 06:40:29 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 270640
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 270638

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1238 AM CST Mon Jan 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not forecast across the continental U.S. Tuesday
    or Tuesday night.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    At mid-levels, a low is forecast to remain over northern Arizona on
    Tuesday as flow becomes more southwesterly across western parts of
    the southern Plains. In response, low-level moisture advection will
    take place across parts of southern and central Texas from Tuesday
    into Tuesday night. The moist sector will remain largely void of
    precipitation, except toward the end of the period when shower
    development will be possible near the Red River along the northern
    edge of the stronger low-level flow. Instability is expected to be
    insufficient for thunderstorm development. Elsewhere across the
    continental U.S., thunderstorms are not expected Tuesday and Tuesday
    night.

    ..Broyles.. 01/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jan 27 16:38:48 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 271637
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 271636

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1036 AM CST Mon Jan 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms may affect northwest Arizona on Tuesday.

    Relatively dry and stable conditions are expected to prevail across
    the continental United States on Tuesday, precluding thunderstorms
    in most areas. One exception will be over the mountains of
    northwest AZ, where a cold upper low will be centered. Forecast
    soundings suggest steep lapse rates and weak-but-sufficient CAPE for
    some risk of isolated afternoon/evening thunderstorms.

    ..Hart.. 01/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 28 07:02:22 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 280702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 280700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CST Tue Jan 28 2025

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL TEXAS VICINITY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong/possibly severe storms will be possible across parts of
    the southern Plains Wednesday evening/overnight.

    ...Synopsis...
    A closed mid-level low over Arizona early Wednesday will move
    eastward and then northeastward across the Southwest/southern
    Rockies, with strong mid-level southwesterlies spreading into the
    south-central U.S. ahead of this system.

    At the surface, weak pressure falls across the southern Plains in
    response to the approach of the upper system will lead to the
    development of an inverted trough over central Texas through the
    second half of the period. A broad zone of low-level warm advection/quasigeostrophic forcing for ascent will result in mainly
    elevated convective development through the second half of the
    period.

    ...Central Texas...
    Low-level theta-e advection will increase through the day Wednesday
    atop a cool surface-based airmass will result in gradual/weak
    elevated destabilization. As quasigeostrophic ascent likewise
    increases with time, elevated showers -- and eventually, scattered thunderstorms -- are expected, with most of the thunderstorm
    activity to occur after dark.

    While the greatest low-level moisture (limited to low 60s dewpoints)
    will occur over eastern portions of central Texas (the Hill Country
    region), truly surface-based convection appears a low-probability
    occurrence. Overall, expect convection to be elevated above a
    persistently stable surface layer, with any wind risk or brief
    tornado potential limited to eastern portions of the risk area.
    Otherwise, a few storms capable of producing marginal hail are
    expected, but overall risk should remain limited by modest CAPE.

    ..Goss.. 01/28/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Jan 28 17:07:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 281707
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 281706

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1106 AM CST Tue Jan 28 2025

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM CENTRAL
    TEXAS TO FAR SOUTH-CENTRAL OKLAHOMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong/possibly severe storms will be possible across parts of
    the southern Plains Wednesday evening/overnight.

    ...Southern Plains...

    A southwest flow/warm advection regime is forecast across the
    southern Plains on Wednesday, ahead of an upper low/trough migrating
    east across the Four Corners and southern Rockies.
    East/southeasterly low-level flow across the western Gulf and
    southern Plains will transport 60s F dewpoints northward into
    portions of central and north TX. Surface cyclogenesis is not
    expected to be particularly strong, but a Pacific front is forecast
    to sharpen and shift east into central to north TX overnight.

    Midlevel lapse rates are forecast to steepen overnight in
    conjunction with a strengthening southerly low-level jet. This will
    aid in modest destabilization, with MLCAPE values to around 500-750
    J/kg evident in forecast guidance. Favorable vertical shear, with
    effective shear magnitudes greater then 35 kt, and
    straight/elongated hodographs above 2 km suggest organized, elevated thunderstorms are possible. Strong low-level inhibition due to poor
    low-level lapse rates and a cool nocturnal boundary layer will
    preclude surface-based instability/convection. Nevertheless,
    conditions will be favorable for isolated hail with strongest
    thunderstorm cores.

    Some forecast soundings suggest low-level inhibition may be somewhat
    less across eastern portions of the Marginal risk (level 1 of 5)
    area near the very end of the period. While the risk of
    surface-based convection is conditional across this area, if a storm
    can become so, enlarged/curved low-level hodographs and favorable
    low-level shear suggest some risk for a tornado and/or strong wind
    gusts could materialize. Given the conditional/low-end nature of the
    risk during the last 1-3 hours of the forecast period, will maintain
    the Marginal risk (level 1 of 5).

    ..Leitman.. 01/28/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 29 07:02:41 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 290702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 290700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CST Wed Jan 29 2025

    Valid 301200Z - 311200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
    SOUTHEASTERN TEXAS INTO SOUTHWESTERN MISSISSIPPI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong/isolated severe storms will be possible Thursday from eastern
    Texas eastward across the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    A closed upper low initially forecast to lie over the southeastern
    Colorado area is expected to move steadily eastward Day 2/Thursday,
    crossing Kansas/Oklahoma and eventually shifting into/across the
    Ozarks through 31/12Z.

    At the surface, a very weak surface low expected over northeastern
    Texas Thursday morning is expected to shift north-northeastward with
    time, with some deepening of the low expected through latter stages
    of the period as it moves into the Illinois/Indiana area.
    Meanwhile, a trailing cold front will sweep across eastern Texas
    early in the period, across the Lower Mississippi Valley area
    through the evening, and should lie from Indiana southward across
    Kentucky and Tennessee, to the mouth of the Mississippi River by the
    end of the period.

    ...East Texas to western Mississippi...
    As the surface cold front shifts eastward through the day, southerly
    low-level winds within the warm sector will advect partially
    modified Gulf air northward into southeastern Texas and Louisiana.
    Weak lapse rates will substantially hinder destabilization, but
    low-level moistening should be sufficient to allow very weak
    surface-based CAPE to develop ahead of the advancing front.

    Elevated showers and storms should be ongoing at the start of the
    period, moving across the eastern half of Texas. As low-level
    moistening allows storms to gradually become surface-based,
    potential for locally damaging winds and a couple of tornadoes will
    increase. Risk should become maximized through the late afternoon
    and early evening hours, expanding into/across Louisiana with time.
    While the meager instability should temper the overall risk,
    favorably strong low-level and deep-layer shear across the region
    will exist, with low-level southerly flow increasing and veering
    substantially with height through the lower half of the troposphere.
    The main storm mode is expected to be rotating storms embedded
    within small-scale linear segments, with convection spreading
    eastward across the Lower Mississippi Valley through the evening
    before weakening overnight.

    ..Goss.. 01/29/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jan 29 17:13:55 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 291713
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 291712

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1112 AM CST Wed Jan 29 2025

    Valid 301200Z - 311200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHEAST
    TEXAS INTO SOUTHWEST MISSISSIPPI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong/isolated severe storms will be possible Thursday from eastern
    Texas eastward across the Lower Mississippi Valley.

    ...East TX into the Lower MS Valley...

    Overall limited changes have been made to the
    categorical/probabilistic outlooks lines with the Day 2 update.

    A mid/upper low and attendant positively tilted trough will develop east/northeast from the southern Rockies/Plains toward the MS
    Valley on Friday. An intense 500 mb southwesterly jet streak (near
    100 kt) ahead of this feature, with a broader swath of 50-80 kt
    southwesterly flow in the mid/upper levels, will move across the
    southern Plains and Mid/Lower MS Valley. A 40+ kt southerly
    low-level jet will aid in strong warm advection from east TX into
    the Mid-South/Lower MS Valley. While surface cyclogenesis will be
    modest, the larger mass response will aid in northward transport of
    Gulf moisture across the region, with 60s F dewpoints generally
    remaining near/south of the I-20 corridor. A cold front will track
    east through the period, with a line of convection in advance of
    this feature bringing some potential for strong to severe
    thunderstorms.

    While very favorable vertical wind profiles will be in place across
    the region, characterized by vertically veering/strengthening winds
    resulting in enlarged low-level hodographs becoming
    straight/elongated above 2-3 km, poor thermodynamics will limit a
    larger severe risk. Mid-60s F dewpoints are expected to remain south
    of the I-20 corridor, with the more favorable warm sector becoming
    increasingly pinched off with north and east extent through the
    evening hours. Poor low-level lapse rates and only modest surface
    heating will likely preclude much in the way of surface-based
    instability.

    Nevertheless, elevated instability will be sufficient for organized
    line segments/clusters within the favorably sheared environment.
    This should support a risk for isolated strong to severe wind gusts
    and perhaps some hail. This risk will be greatest over parts of
    southeast TX into LA and far southwest MS from around 21-02z as
    ongoing morning convection moves into a somewhat more moist/unstable
    airmass. While non-zero, the tornado risk appear limited by the lack
    of surface-based instability and poor low-level lapse rates.
    However, given a favorable shear environment, if boundary-layer
    instability is greater than forecast guidance/soundings indicate, a
    tornado or two may occur.

    With loss of daytime heating, strong ascent becoming displaced to
    the north after dark, and decreasing instability with eastward
    extent, the severe risk should fairly quickly diminish across MS
    during the late evening.

    ..Leitman.. 01/29/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 30 06:56:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 300656
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 300654

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1254 AM CST Thu Jan 30 2025

    Valid 311200Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND EASTERN GULF COAST REGION...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of strong/potentially severe storms may occur over parts of
    the central/eastern Gulf Coast region Friday.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper low moving across the central U.S. early Friday is progged
    to devolve into an open wave, which will move quickly across the
    eastern half of the U.S. with time. By the end of the period, this
    feature will likely have reached the Atlantic Coast.

    At the surface, a weak low will move across the Midwest and central Appalachians early in the period, and then should redevelop off the
    New England coast after sunset. A trailing cold front will cross
    the Southeast and Atlantic Coast states with time, moving offshore
    overnight and trailing only across the Florida Peninsula through the
    end of the period.

    ...Mouth of the Mississippi eastward to southwestern Georgia...
    Showers -- and possibly a few thunderstorms -- should be ongoing
    Friday morning, largely elevated above a weakly stable boundary
    layer. Weak heating through the morning and into early afternoon
    may support meager, nearly surface-based CAPE to gradually evolve.
    Given favorable background shear across the warm sector, a few
    stronger updrafts cannot be ruled out. Though the lack of more
    substantial instability should substantially hinder potential for
    severe weather, a few stronger gusts and/or a brief tornado cannot
    be ruled out. The risk should peak from late morning through late
    afternoon, diminishing into the evening as the front -- and
    associated convective band -- advance eastward across Georgia and
    the Florida Panhandle.

    ..Goss.. 01/30/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jan 30 17:09:23 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 301708
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 301707

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1107 AM CST Thu Jan 30 2025

    Valid 311200Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM FAR
    SOUTHEAST LOUISIANA INTO FAR SOUTHWEST GEORGIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of strong/potentially severe storms may occur over parts of
    the central/eastern Gulf Coast region Friday.

    ...Central/eastern Gulf Coast...

    An upper low/trough from the Mid-MS Valley to the southern Plains
    will shift east to the Atlantic coast on Friday. Strong deep-layer southwesterly flow will overspread the Southeast ahead of the
    trough. Meanwhile, a cold front will develop east/southeast across
    the region through early Saturday. A line of showers and isolated
    thunderstorms will likely be ongoing Friday morning from the TN
    Valley toward far southeast LA. While vertical shear will be quite
    favorable for organized convection, poor lapse rates and a
    relatively cool/capped boundary-layer will limit destabilization.
    Where deeper boundary-layer moisture is evident closer to the coast,
    some potential for an isolated strong storm or two may evolve during
    the late morning into the afternoon from near the mouth of the MS to
    far southwest GA. Gusty winds will be the main hazard with any
    stronger storm that can develop. However, very near the coast, if
    any weak surface-based instability can develop, favorable low-level
    shear could result in a tornado. Overall, severe potential appears
    to be quite limited by poor thermodynamics.

    ...TN/OH Valley vicinity...

    Isolated shallow convection may develop within the colder core of
    the upper low during the afternoon/early evening. Cooling midlevel
    temperatures will support steepening midlevel lapse rates,
    contributing to weak MUCAPE. Forecast soundings indicate somewhat
    dry midlevels, though some moistening may occur and low-topped
    convection could produce a few lightning strikes or even small,
    sub-severe hail for a few hours.

    ..Leitman.. 01/30/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 31 06:57:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 310656
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 310654

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1254 AM CST Fri Jan 31 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm potential across the United States appears low on
    Saturday.

    ...Discussion...
    As an upper short-wave trough moves off the East Coast early in the
    period, flow aloft will trend quasi-zonal across the U.S. through
    Sunday morning. Emanating from a low over the southwestern Canada
    coast, several short-wave features are expected to eject eastward
    across the northern U.S. within the evolving/fast westerly flow
    regime.

    At the surface, a weak low is forecast to shift eastward across
    southern Canada, as the aforementioned short-wave energy shifts
    eastward. A trailing cold front associated with this low will shift southeastward across the northern Intermountain region through the
    period. Elsewhere, cold frontolysis will occur over the Florida
    Peninsula, as trailing portion of the cold front crossing the
    western Atlantic sags southward with time.

    With largely cool/stable air across most of the country, little
    thunder potential is evident. A flash or two may occur across parts
    of the northwestern U.S., within an area of showers across this
    region. A flash or two may occur offshore from Florida, but
    lightning is not expected inland. Overall, any lightning over the
    U.S. should remain well below 10% coverage thresholds, and thus no
    thunder areas will be included for this forecast.

    ..Goss.. 01/31/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jan 31 17:00:38 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 311700
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 311658

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1058 AM CST Fri Jan 31 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm potential across the United States appears low on
    Saturday.

    ...Synopsis...

    Low-amplitude, quasi-zonal upper level flow will emerge across the
    CONUS as a shortwave trough moves offshore the Atlantic coast early
    Saturday. At the surface, low pressure centered over southern
    portions of the Canadian Prairies will shift east, while a trailing
    cold front moves across the northern Rockies/High Plains region. A
    weak frontal zone across the FL Peninsula will dissipate, while
    strong surface high pressure persists across the eastern U.S.
    northern low-level flow across the western Atlantic and Gulf will
    result in a dry and stable airmass across much of the U.S. east of
    the Rockies.

    Precipitation is more likely across portions of the Pacific
    Northwest as moist onshore deep-layer flow streams over the region.
    Cold midlevels will result in steep lapse rates and meager elevated instability. A lightning flash or two is possible along the WA coast
    with low-topped convection, but thunderstorm coverage is expected to
    remain less than 10 percent and more likely offshore.

    ..Leitman.. 01/31/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 1 06:53:42 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 010653
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 010652

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1252 AM CST Sat Feb 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm activity is forecast to be minimal across the U.S. on
    Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Zonal flow pattern aloft will prevail across the U.S. on Sunday.
    Farther north, a short-wave trough/low is forecast to move
    across/out of southern portions of the Canadian Prairie into/across
    Ontario through the period.

    In tandem with this Canadian feature, a surface low is progged to
    cross Ontario, reaching the James Bay vicinity by Monday morning. A
    trailing cold front will sharpen/shift slowly southward across the
    northern Intermountain region/northern Plains, and eventually
    southeastward across the Upper Great Lakes region.

    With continental/stable air forecast to prevail across the country, thunderstorms are not expected CONUS-wide.

    ..Goss.. 02/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 1 17:31:47 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 011731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 011730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1130 AM CST Sat Feb 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm activity is forecast to be minimal across the U.S. on
    Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad belt of generally westerly flow aloft will exist across the
    northern half of the CONUS on Sunday, with a leading wave moving
    across the OH Valley and Great Lakes. A strong midlevel temperature
    gradient will remain across WA, MT, and into the Dakotas and MN, as
    the base of a low-amplitude wave skirts those areas.

    At the surface, high pressure will exist over the East, and across
    the southern Plains and into the Southwest. Gradual low-level
    moistening may occur late toward TX with modest southerly winds
    developing beneath the midlevel westerlies. However, any appreciable instability will remain offshore. Otherwise, little to no
    instability is forecast to support thunderstorms across the CONUS.

    ..Jewell.. 02/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 2 06:59:21 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 020659
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 020657

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1257 AM CST Sun Feb 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Minimal thunder potential is evident across the U.S. on Monday.

    ...Discussion...
    A zonal flow configuration aloft is forecast at the start of the Day
    2 period across the U.S., but with weak amplification expected with
    time, as a weak low near the southwestern Canada coast deepens and
    retrogrades slowly southwestward. As this occurs, broader/weakly
    cyclonic flow will gradually evolve near and off the West Coast. In
    response, weak downstream ridging will occur over the central U.S.,
    and troughing still further downstream, over the eastern states.

    At the surface, a cold front will shift eastward across eastern
    Canada and the Northeast, and southward across the Plains and
    Midwest. By late in the period, the front should extend from near
    the New England coast and Mid-Atlantic region west-southwestward to
    the southern Plains.

    While weak low-level theta-e advection is expected across the
    southern U.S. south of the cold front, it should remain insufficient
    to yield CAPE supportive of thunderstorm development. Meanwhile,
    Arctic air expanding southward across the northern U.S. will prove
    hostile to deep convection.

    Late in the period, short-wave troughing moving into California will
    likely support an increase in showers -- and potentially an embedded
    lightning flash or two near the central Coast. Overall potential
    however does not appear to warrant inclusion of a 10% thunder area
    at this time.

    ..Goss.. 02/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 2 17:30:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 021730
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 021728

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1128 AM CST Sun Feb 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Little if any thunder potential is evident across the U.S. on
    Monday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Zonal flow on Monday will gradually amplify a bit as a broad upper
    trough takes shape across the West with an upper low off the coastal
    Pacific Northwest. Meanwhile, a low-amplitude feature will move
    across the Great Lakes and into the Northeast.

    At the surface, the air mass will remain largely stable over land,
    with high pressure over the Southeast. Limited elevated instability
    may develop within a midlevel moist plume which will affect northern
    into central CA. However, overall thunderstorm chances appear below
    threshold.

    Elsewhere, low-level moisture will return into parts of TX toward
    the ArkLaTex with low to mid 60s F dewpoints. However, this air mass
    should remain capped beneath warm midlevel temperatures.

    ..Jewell.. 02/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 3 07:03:28 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 030703
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 030702

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0102 AM CST Mon Feb 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm potential appears low overall on Tuesday.

    ...Discussion...
    Low-amplitude flow aloft will prevail across the U.S. Tuesday, with
    a weak western ridge/central trough/eastern ridge configuration
    expected to prevail. Within the broader flow field, a short-wave
    trough is forecast to shift east-northeastward out of California and
    the Great Basin/Four Corners states through the period.

    At the surface, a baroclinic zone extending from the southern Plains
    to the Carolinas/Virginia will make slow southward progress across
    the southeastern states, while remaining more quasistationary over
    the southern Plains.

    Showers are forecast to develop north of the boundary later in the
    period -- particularly across the Mid-Mississippi/Ohio/Tennessee
    Valleys, as quasigeostrophic forcing for ascent increases. However,
    not more than a few flashes of lightning are anticipated at this
    time, prior to 05/12Z. A few flashes may also occur across portions
    of the West, in tandem with the advance of the upper short-wave
    feature, but coverage should remain well below 10% -- thus negating
    any need for a thunder area.

    ..Goss.. 02/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 3 17:19:03 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 031718
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 031717

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1117 AM CST Mon Feb 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered weak thunderstorm development is possible along the
    western slopes of the Sierra Nevada, and near Oregon coastal areas,
    late Tuesday into Tuesday night. Otherwise, the risk for
    thunderstorms appears negligible across much of the nation.

    ...Discussion...
    Downstream of a blocking high, centered to the southeast of the
    Aleutians, models indicate that large-scale mid-level troughing will
    be maintained across and offshore of the Pacific Northwest, though
    an embedded low may reform to the south-southwest of Vancouver
    Island. To the east of this regime, large-scale mid-level ridging
    may continue to slowly build across the northern U.S. Great Plains
    and adjacent Canadian Prairies into the Great Lakes region, while a
    short wave perturbation digs within northwest flow to its northeast
    and east. In a separate branch of westerlies, emanating from the
    southern mid-latitude Pacific, a notable short wave perturbation is
    forecast to accelerate inland across the California coast and Great Basin/Rockies by 12Z Wednesday, ahead of an inland advancing
    perturbation within the more prominent cyclonic regime to the north.

    In lower-levels, it appears that surface troughing will slowly begin
    to deepen to the immediate lee of the Rockies, as the center of an
    expansive cold surface ridge shifts from the Canadian Prairies and
    northern U.S. Great Plains into the Great Lakes, beneath the more
    strongly confluent mid-level flow. The shallow leading edge of the
    seasonably cold air mass may stall across parts of the southern
    Great Plains into Ohio Valley, while advancing offshore of the
    northern and middle Atlantic Seaboard. At the same time, a
    southerly return flow of moisture is forecast to develop from parts
    of the western Gulf Basin into the southern U.S. Great Plains and
    lower Mississippi Valley.

    ...California/Sierra Nevada...
    In advance of the perturbation emanating from the southern
    mid-latitude Pacific, low/mid-level moistening, differential thermal
    advection and strong lift, aided by a strengthening upslope flow
    component, may contribute to weak destabilization along the western
    slopes of the Sierra Nevada by Tuesday afternoon. Forecast
    soundings suggest that thermodynamic profiles may become supportive
    of convection capable of producing lightning by early Tuesday
    evening, if not earlier.

    ...Oregon coastal areas...
    Models indicate that lower/mid-tropospheric cooling will lead to
    increasing boundary-layer destabilization near coastal areas through
    the period. As this occurs, some convection, within a broader area
    of continuing convective development, may deepen through
    sufficiently cold layers aloft to support occasional lightning.

    ...Ozark Plateau/Mid South...
    Beneath low-amplitude large-scale mid-level ridging across the
    southern Great Plains through the lower Mississippi Valley and
    Southeast, it appears that low-level moistening and warming will
    contribute to increasing potential instability. Models indicate
    that this will generally remain capped by a relatively warm/dry
    layer further aloft. However, it is possible that an area of
    strengthening lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection may become a
    focus for deepening elevated convective development by late Tuesday
    night, somewhere across the Ozark Plateau/Mid South vicinity. This
    may include isolated weak thunderstorm development, but the extent
    of this potential, and exactly where, remain uncertain, resulting in
    the maintenance of thunderstorm probabilities below 10 percent.

    ..Kerr.. 02/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 4 07:09:38 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 040709
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 040708

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0108 AM CST Tue Feb 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
    MISSISSIPPI DELTA REGION NORTHEASTWARD ACROSS THE TENNESSEE VALLEY
    AREA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of strong to potentially severe storms may occur across
    portions of the Mid South Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Within a background low-amplitude upper flow field, an embedded
    short-wave trough is forecast to shift across the Plains and
    into/across the Midwest/Ohio Valley region with time. As this
    occurs, a weak surface frontal wave along the lingering west-to-east
    baroclinic zone is expected to shift from the Oklahoma area during
    the afternoon, across the Mid Mississippi and later the Ohio Valley
    region. Showers and thunderstorms are expected across the Mid South
    region and vicinity, in response, particularly during the latter
    half of the period.

    ...Tennessee/Kentucky and vicinity...
    Convection is forecast to gradually increase into the afternoon and
    evening hours across the Mid and Lower Mississippi/Tennessee
    Valleys, and eventually Ohio Valley, with a broad zone of warm advection/quasigeostrophic forcing for ascent ahead of the advancing
    mid-level wave.

    While weak lapse rates and only partially modified low-level air
    will exist across the warm sector, shear will be favorable across
    the region for updraft organization. The lack of more substantial
    CAPE is expected to largely temper severe-weather potential, but a
    few stronger storms are expected, mainly from mid afternoon mid
    evening. Any vigorous/sustained updraft which can evolve, will be
    capable of producing gusty winds -- perhaps reaching severe levels
    locally. A brief tornado or two could also occur, given shear
    sufficient for both low- and mid-level updraft rotation.

    ..Goss.. 02/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 4 17:36:39 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 041736
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 041734

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1134 AM CST Tue Feb 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    KENTUCKY AND TENNESSEE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A conditional risk of a few strong or severe storms exists over
    parts of Kentucky and Tennessee late Wednesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    On Wednesday, an upper trough will be situated over the Pacific
    Northwest, with an early disturbance lifting into MT with height
    rises over OR. Otherwise, a westerly flow regime will exist across
    the rest of the CONUS, with various embedded waves.

    One such lead wave will move across the central Plains during the
    day, and will quickly move into the mid MS and lower OH valley
    during the evening and overnight.

    At the surface, high pressure will be strongest across the Great
    Lakes and Northeast, but another lobe of surface ridge will extend
    into the Southeast. Modest southerly low-level winds will maintain a
    moistening air mass from TX into the TN Valley, as a warm front
    lifts across TN and into KY. Overnight, a cold front associated with
    the midlevel wave will be near the OH River between 06-12Z, likely
    interacting with the moist plume.

    ...KY/TN/MS/AL...
    During the day, a few thunderstorms may develop within the deepening
    moist plume from northern MS/AL into Middle TN. This will occur with
    limited surface heating, and primarily in association with weak warm
    advection and moisture extending up through 700 mb. Midlevel lapse
    rates will not be very steep, and general thunderstorms appear most
    likely here.

    Overnight, as the midlevel wave and cold front approaches from the
    west, lift will interact with the low 60s F dewpoints and MLCAPE
    over 500 J/kg, with several thunderstorms possible. The main
    uncertainty for severe risk is regarding low-level lapse rates,
    however, shear will be strong with long hodographs and effective SRH
    possibly exceeding 400 m2/s2. As such, a conditional risk of a
    supercell or two will exist, including brief tornado risk as well as
    strong wind gusts.

    ..Jewell.. 02/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 5 07:02:34 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 050702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 050700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CST Wed Feb 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe weather is not expected across the U.S. on Thursday.

    ...Discussion...
    Zonal flow aloft will broadly persist across the U.S. Thursday, with
    the two main features being a short-wave trough pivoting toward --
    and eventually into -- the Pacific Northwest, and a second that will
    cross Ontario/Quebec and the Great Lakes region through the period.
    Meanwhile, a much weaker/more subtle disturbance will move out of
    the Pacific and across California early, and then continue eastward
    across the Four Corners states, and eventually -- by the end of the
    period -- emerge into the Plains.

    At the surface, a weak frontal wave should move across the central
    Appalachians and then off the New England coast by evening, while
    the trailing cold front makes only slow southward progress across
    the Southeast and Southern Plains through the period.

    Showers and possibly a few weak thunderstorms may be ongoing at the
    start of the period, from the Tennessee Valley into the Mid-Atlantic
    region. Weak convective activity will likely continue during the
    period, along the aforementioned surface front as it sags southward.
    However, weak instability forecast across the region should
    substantially hinder appreciable severe risk. At this time, it
    appears that a stronger, elevated afternoon storm or two, evolving
    over the North Carolina vicinity, possibly capable of producing
    hail. However, overall risk for any hail exceeding 1" in diameter
    appears too small at this time to introduce a MRGL risk area.

    ..Goss.. 02/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 5 17:28:50 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 051728
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 051727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1127 AM CST Wed Feb 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THURSDAY MORNING
    ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEASTERN KENTUCKY AND ADJACENT PORTIONS OF TENNESSEE...VIRGINIA...WEST VIRGINIA....

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong thunderstorms posing at least some risk for scattered
    potentially damaging wind gusts and perhaps small hail may impact
    parts of southeastern Kentucky and adjacent portions of northern
    Tennessee, southwestern Virginia and West Virginia early Thursday.

    ...Discussion...
    Models indicate that large-scale ridging centered over the
    northeastern Pacific will be maintained through this period,
    although it appears that an embedded mid-level high to the southeast
    of the Aleutians is in the process of weakening. As this proceeds,
    the downstream mid-level low, currently offshore of the Pacific
    Northwest, is also forecast to weaken, and a more significant
    upstream perturbation may begin to migrate inland across
    Oregon/northern California coastal areas by late Thursday night.
    Downstream, it appears that broad mid-level ridging will build
    across the northern Rockies and Great Plains, eastward into the
    lower Ohio Valley, to the north of broad ridging centered over the
    subtropical western Atlantic through northern Mexico, and in the
    wake of a significant mid-level trough accelerating across and east
    of the Great Lakes through Canadian Maritimes.

    The latter feature may be accompanied by cyclogenesis across the St.
    Lawrence Valley, and/or across the Canadian Maritimes by the end of
    the period, but models vary concerning this. However, it does
    appear that the leading edge of a slowly modifying surface cold
    intrusion to the lee of the Rockies will advance through the Mid
    Atlantic and south of the Ohio Valley, while remaining generally
    stalled across parts of the southern Great Plains. At the same
    time, a return flow of moisture may continue across the western Gulf
    Basin through the northwestern Gulf Coast/lower Mississippi Valley
    and middle/southern Atlantic Seaboard. Beneath relatively warm
    layers at mid/upper levels, potential instability is likely to
    remain weak, and capped, except in a corridor near the southward
    advancing front, from parts of the Ozark Plateau/Mid South into the
    Alleghenies and east of the Blue Ridge, where scattered thunderstorm development is possible Thursday into Thursday night.

    ...Mid South into Allegheny/Cumberland Plateau...
    In response to a short wave perturbation, consolidating with the
    larger-scale mid-level troughing progressing into/through the Great
    Lakes late tonight into early Thursday, lower/mid-tropospheric wind
    fields are forecast to undergo considerable intensification across
    and east-northeast of the lower Ohio Valley vicinity. It appears
    that this will include strengthening to 50-70+ kt within a
    southwesterly to westerly regime in the 850-500 mb layer, across a
    narrow destabilizing pre-frontal corridor across southeastern
    Kentucky and adjacent portions of surrounding states by 12Z
    Thursday.

    However, where large-scale ascent is able to overcome mid-level
    inhibition and support thunderstorm development, RAP and NAM
    forecast soundings exhibit mid-level lapse rates supportive of only
    weak CAPE, which probably will remain rooted above a saturated near-
    surface layer characterized by moist adiabatic to more stable lapse
    rates. While this is generally expected to minimize the risk for
    severe weather, small hail might not be out of the question in
    stronger storms, and it is possible that latent cooling associated
    with melting might enhance downdrafts sufficiently to aid the
    downward transfer of stronger momentum to the surface.

    ..Kerr.. 02/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 6 06:59:19 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 060659
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 060657

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1257 AM CST Thu Feb 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Showers and a few lightning flashes will be possible Friday,
    particularly across the high terrain of northern Utah and vicinity.

    ...Discussion...
    Within the background quasi-zonal flow aloft across the U.S., a
    short-wave trough is forecast to shift eastward out of the
    northwestern U.S. across the Great Basin and northern Intermountain
    region. Quasigeostrophic ascent associated with this feature will
    support scattered showers, with a few lightning flashes possible -- particularly across favored high-terrain areas of northern Utah and
    surrounding areas.

    The advance of the aforementioned upper system will support eastward progression of a weak/associated surface low. Late in the period,
    the low should emerge into the northern Plains. Meanwhile, farther
    south, a persistent baroclinic zone will remain draped from Oklahoma
    to the Carolinas through the period. While isolated showers will be
    possible in the vicinity of this front, weak instability should
    preclude thunderstorm potential.

    ..Goss.. 02/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 6 17:06:30 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 061706
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 061705

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1105 AM CST Thu Feb 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Aside from some potential for a couple of weak thunderstorms across
    parts of the northern Rockies vicinity, the risk for thunderstorms
    appears negligible across much of the U.S., Friday through Friday
    night.

    ...Discussion...
    Models indicate that broad mid/upper ridging will be maintained
    across the subtropical latitudes, from northern Mexico through the
    western Atlantic, and a prominent influence across the southern into
    central tier of the U.S. through this period, downstream of
    persistent ridging in the northern mid-latitudes, and troughing in
    the southern mid- to subtropic latitudes, of the eastern Pacific.
    To the east of the northeastern Pacific ridging, broad mean
    troughing, with more progressive embedded smaller-scale
    perturbations, is forecast to linger across British Columbia and
    the Pacific Northwest, while developing eastward across the Canadian
    Prairies, northern U.S. Rockies and Great Plains.

    Beneath this regime, guidance indicates potential for modest surface cyclogenesis across eastern Colorado through areas near/south of the Kansas/Oklahoma border vicinity. There appears better consensus
    among the models, particularly the ECENS/ECMWF and GEFS/GFS. But
    this output may still be having issues handling ongoing reinforcing
    cold intrusions to the lee of Rockies. The NAM and Rapid Refresh
    remain slower to erode the colder boundary-layer across the Texas
    South Plains into central Oklahoma vicinity, and are slower and
    weaker with the evolving surface wave.

    Otherwise, a gradual erosion, from south to north, of the shallow
    leading edge of the entrenched cold air mass is possible, beneath a
    continuing southerly to westerly return flow across parts of the
    southeastern Great Plains into southern Mid Atlantic. However, it
    appears that associated moisture emanating from a modifying western
    Gulf boundary layer will not become supportive of more than weak destabilization, or an appreciable risk for thunderstorms, due to
    negligible forcing for ascent and warm, capping layers aloft.

    ...Pacific Northwest into northern Great Plains...
    Models do indicate that forcing for ascent and cooling mid-levels
    may contribute to pockets of weak destabilization across parts of
    the Pacific Northwest into northern Great Plains during this period.
    However, based on the latest NAM and Rapid Refresh forecast
    soundings, the calibrated High Resolution Ensemble Forecast guidance
    might be too aggressive with probabilities for thunderstorms across
    the eastern Great Basin into northern Rockies vicinity for Friday
    afternoon and evening. Instability will probably be sufficient to
    support scattered to numerous snow and rain showers. However,
    whether the boundary layer in higher elevations warms enough, or
    convection initiating in lower elevations deepens through
    sufficiently cold layers aloft, to support an appreciable risk for
    lightning remains a bit unclear.

    ..Kerr.. 02/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 7 06:07:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 070606
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 070605

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1205 AM CST Fri Feb 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Shallow convective showers and isolated thunderstorms are possible
    in portions of the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys on Saturday. Severe
    weather potential is low.

    ...Synopsis...
    Low-amplitude upper-level ridging will develop in the wake of
    departing trough across the Great Lakes into the Mid-South. Within
    the central Plains, another shortwave trough is expected to
    intensify as it progresses eastward into the Ohio
    Valley/Mid-Atlantic by Sunday morning. At the surface, the initial
    stages of warm advection into the Tennessee Valley will take place
    late Friday night and will continue through mid/late Saturday
    afternoon. Modest moisture (mid/upper 50s F dewpoints) may reach as
    far north as the Ohio Valley region. By Saturday evening, a strong
    cold front will then push into Mid-South/Southeast into Sunday
    morning. A modest surface cyclone will develop in response to the
    secondary upper trough and progress along the surface boundary.

    ...Ohio/Tennessee Valleys...
    Models continue to show variability in the strength of the surface
    cyclone and, consequently, the degree of warm/moist advection into
    the regions. Despite these differences, there is likely to be some
    remnant, shallow cold air across Kentucky/Tennessee and adjacent
    areas. Cloud cover will mute surface heating, but offsetting warm
    advection should allow areas of low 60s F temperatures south of the
    Ohio River. The thermodynamic environment is expected to be rather
    weak. The general model consensus would suggest no more than 100
    J/kg of MUCAPE is possible. The primary driver of convection will be
    the cold front where shallow convective showers are probable.
    Convective depth will be limited by lingering warm air aloft and
    lightning production will be minimal to isolated. Even with these
    limitations, 40-50 kts of flow at 850 mb could allow for isolated
    stronger wind gusts within locally deeper convection. Given the
    remaining uncertainties and expected sparse coverage of marginally
    stronger activity, severe potential still appears low. Near and
    north of the Ohio River, convection should remain elevated with
    similar low/isolated potential for lightning.

    ..Wendt.. 02/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 7 17:21:12 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 071720
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 071719

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1119 AM CST Fri Feb 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorm development is possible across parts of the
    Ohio Valley Saturday into Saturday night, but the risk for severe
    weather appears negligible.

    ...Discussion...
    Mid/upper flow is in the process of amplifying across the northern mid-latitudes of the eastern Pacific into western North America, and
    models continue to indicate further amplification into and through
    this period. This includes building mid-level ridging across the
    northeastern Pacific through Alaska, and subsequent digging
    downstream troughing across and to the lee of the Canadian and
    northern U.S. Rockies. Otherwise, the confluent downstream
    westerlies are forecast to remain generally zonal across the
    interior U.S. through offshore western Atlantic, between broad
    ridging, centered over the subtropic latitudes of northern Mexico
    into the western Atlantic, and a broad vortex, centered near the
    northeastern Canadian Arctic latitudes. At mid/upper levels, the
    subtropical ridging may maintain considerable influence as far north
    as the southern into central tier of the United States.

    Within the confluent regime across the northern tier of the U.S., it
    still appears that at least a couple of short wave perturbations
    might loosely consolidate into larger-scale, but still
    low-amplitude, troughing across the Great Lakes into Northeast by
    late Saturday through Saturday night. This is forecast to be
    trailed by a similar perturbation accelerating from the Great Basin
    into north central Great Plains. Beneath and just to the south of
    this regime, another cold surface ridge is likely to be in the
    process of building to the lee of the northern Rockies by early
    Saturday, reinforcing cold air already entrenched to the east of the
    Rockies. It still appears that the shallow southern periphery of
    this cold air will initially be in the process of eroding beneath a
    continuing south to southwesterly return flow across the Ozark
    Plateau into Ohio Valley. However, models indicate that associated
    low-level warming and moistening will largely remain confined
    beneath dry, warming layers farther aloft, as the reinforcing cold
    intrusion progresses south (and reaches the Gulf Coast state by 12Z
    Sunday).

    ...Ohio Valley...
    A pre-frontal corridor of boundary-layer warming and moistening near
    a developing frontal wave may contribute to weak potential
    instability, coincident with strengthening lower/mid-tropospheric
    wind fields, across the southern/eastern Kentucky vicinity by late
    Saturday afternoon. However, based on latest model output, it
    remains unlikely that forcing for ascent within the warm sector will
    be sufficient to overcome inhibition.

    Weak elevated thunderstorm development still appears possible
    Saturday through Saturday night, within an initial
    lower/mid-tropospheric warm advection regime near/north of the Ohio
    River into Allegheny Plateau and, later, near/south of the Ohio
    River along the undercutting southward advancing cold front.

    ..Kerr.. 02/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 8 06:18:07 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 080618
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 080616

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1216 AM CST Sat Feb 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    There is minimal risk for thunderstorms across the CONUS on Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Zonal flow aloft will be present east of the Divide. A surface high
    within the Plains will shift southeastward into the mid-Mississippi
    Valley. This will push a cold front to near the Gulf Coast. With
    generally stable conditions expected, thunderstorm potential appears
    to be minimal.

    ..Wendt.. 02/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 8 17:18:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 081718
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 081716

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1116 AM CST Sat Feb 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    There is minimal risk for thunderstorms on Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...

    Quasi-zonal deep-layer flow will overspread much of the CONUS east
    of the Divide on Sunday. At the surface, high pressure will build
    over the Midwest. Meanwhile, a cold front will sag southward across
    the Southeast/Gulf coast vicinity. While modest moisture will be in
    place ahead of the front, weak lapse rates and drying aloft will
    limit instability. Furthermore, large-scale ascent will be nebulous
    while deep-layer flow remains parallel to the boundary. As such,
    limited opportunity for thunderstorm activity is expected.

    ..Leitman.. 02/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 9 06:36:44 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 090636
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 090635

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1235 AM CST Sun Feb 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible from the Edwards Plateau into
    central and northeast Texas late Monday night. Severe weather
    potential is low.

    ...Synopsis...
    Zonal flow east of the Divide will generally shift eastward Monday.
    A low-amplitude shortwave trough will lift northeastward through
    northern Mexico into West/Central Texas by Tuesday morning. At the
    surface, a cold front initially near the Gulf Coast will likely move
    slowly northward in response to the approaching trough. Modest
    mid-level ascent and weak low-level warm advection will occur late
    in the period from the Edwards Plateau into northeast Texas. As
    scattered showers develop overnight Monday, a few embedded
    thunderstorms may occur given the weak elevated buoyancy present.
    Though shear will be strong, the poor thermodynamic environment will
    keep potential for severe weather quite low.

    ..Wendt.. 02/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 9 17:02:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 091702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 091700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1100 AM CST Sun Feb 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible from central Texas to southeast
    Oklahoma Monday night/early Tuesday.

    ...Southern Plains...

    Quasi-zonal upper flow will overspread much of the CONUS on Monday.
    As an upper trough develops slowly east across the Southwest and
    northern Mexico, deep-layer southwesterly flow will overspread the
    southern Plains. Weak large-scale ascent will overspread the region
    during the nighttime hours, providing some support for convective
    development.

    At the surface, a cold front will linger near the Gulf coast. Some
    northward retreat of this boundary is possible, though forecast
    guidance still varies quite a bit regarding the location of the
    boundary during the last 6-12 hours of the forecast period.
    Regardless, deeper boundary-layer moisture will remain confined to
    the TX coastal Plain. Nevertheless, warm advection atop the boundary
    into central/north TX and the ArkLaTex vicinity is expected. Some
    cooling aloft and steepening lapse rates will support modest
    elevated instability (generally less than 400 J/kg MUCAPE)
    overnight. Isolated thunderstorms will be possible within this warm
    advection regime from near the TX Big Bend to southeast OK Monday
    night/early Tuesday. Severe thunderstorm potential is expected to
    remain low given poor thermodynamics.

    ..Leitman.. 02/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 10 06:30:20 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 100630
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 100628

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 AM CST Mon Feb 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible from the southern
    Plains into the lower Mississippi Valley on Tuesday. Severe weather
    is not currently anticipated.

    ...Synopsis...
    Broad upper-level troughing is expected to evolve over much of the
    West on Tuesday. A shortwave perturbation is expected to eject into
    the southern Plains late Tuesday into Wednesday morning. At the
    surface, a cold front should extend from the southern High Plains
    into central Texas before arcing northeastward along the upper Texas
    Gulf Coast and into the lower Mississippi Valley.

    ...Southern Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley...
    Precipitation is likely to be ongoing early Tuesday morning. Most of
    this activity will be occurring on the cool side of the boundary.
    This should reinforce the front, though some modest northward
    progression of warmer, moist air may occur within the coastal plain
    regions. Potential for surface-based storms south of the boundary in
    southeast Texas/Sabine Valley vicinity appears low as the low-level
    jet will weaken during the morning/afternoon and mid-level ascent
    will be weak. Furthermore, forecast soundings indicate poor lapse
    rates in the column and warm layers that will inhibit updraft
    intensity. Overnight Tuesday into Wednesday morning, additional
    isolated to scattered storms are possible from the Edwards Plateau
    into Central/Northeast Texas as mid-level forcing and 850 mb warm
    advection increases. Again, these storms will be elevated on the
    cool side of the boundary. The strongest of these storms could
    produce small hail. The overall severe threat appears too
    isolated/uncertain for unconditional probabilities.

    ..Wendt.. 02/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 10 17:11:27 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 101711
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 101709

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1109 AM CST Mon Feb 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible from the southern
    Plains into the lower Mississippi Valley on Tuesday. Severe weather
    is not currently anticipated.

    ...Southern Plains to Lower MS Valley...

    A large-scale upper trough will migrate across the western U.S. on
    Tuesday, becoming oriented over the High Plains and northern Mexico
    by early Wednesday. Enhanced southwesterly flow ahead of this
    feature will overspread the southern Plains to the Lower MS, TN and
    OH Valleys. During the day, several shortwave impulses will migrate
    through southwesterly flow from the southern Plains to the
    Mid-South, while stronger large-scale ascent tied to the main upper
    trough will emerge over OK/TX to the ArkLaTex early Wednesday.

    Forecast guidance continues to vary with position/evolution of a
    surface boundary located over the TX/LA coastal plain during the
    morning. The ECMWF continues to be somewhat of an outlier,
    maintaining a more northward position of this boundary compared to
    other guidance. This does introduce some uncertainty with regards to
    severe potential. However, the current expectation is that even if a
    more northerly surface boundary position occurs, several other
    factors will act to limit severe thunderstorm probabilities.

    While warm advection through the period will result in scattered
    thunderstorms from Tuesday morning into Wednesday morning from the
    southern Plains to the Lower MS Valley, large-scale ascent will be
    focused somewhat to the north of better low-level moisture near the
    Coastal Plain. Additionally, convection will largely remain to the
    cool side of the boundary given boundary-parallel deep-layer flow
    and a lack of stronger surface cyclogenesis. This should limit
    convective potential ahead of the front in the open warm sector.
    Forecast soundings also indicate warm layers aloft, and overall
    modest lapse rates, resulting in mostly weak elevated instability
    unfavorable for stronger updrafts despite moderate to strong
    vertical shear.

    Overnight, as stronger large-scale ascent moves into the southern
    Plains with the main upper trough, additional elevated thunderstorms
    are likely to develop across parts of central TX eastward toward the
    Sabine Valley. Cooling aloft will aid in steeper midlevel lapse
    rates and increasing MUCAPE. This activity may conditionally pose a
    risk for hail to near 1 inch diameter in the last 3-6 hours of the
    forecast period. Overall potential appears too limited/uncertain to
    include a Marginal risk at this time.

    ..Leitman.. 02/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 11 06:39:59 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 110639
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 110638

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1238 AM CST Tue Feb 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
    EASTERN LOUISIANA INTO CENTRAL/SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI AND PARTS OF WESTERN/CENTRAL ALABAMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms will be possible Wednesday afternoon into Wednesday
    night from the Sabine Valley vicinity into far western Georgia.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough pivoting through the southern High Plains will
    begin to intensify by Wednesday afternoon as it approaches the
    mid-Mississippi Valley. A surface cyclone will evolve along a
    southward-surging cold front in the southern Plains. The surface low
    will deepen more substantially by late afternoon in the
    mid-Mississippi Valley as it moves quickly north and east. Richer
    Gulf moisture will return into the Southeast and may reach as far
    north as portions of Tennessee. The cold front will sweep through
    the Southeast beginning in the late afternoon and into Thursday
    morning.

    ...Lower MS Valley/Central Gulf Coast States...
    Warm advection precipitation will likely be ongoing along the
    surface boundary Wednesday morning. Models vary on the spatial
    extent of precipitation with the ECMWF generally showing less
    clearing during the afternoon than other models. Available CAM
    guidance also shows similar variability. In terms of environment,
    low/mid 60s F dewpoints should reach through much of
    Alabama/Mississippi. Upper 60s F dewpoints are expected in southern Louisiana/Mississippi/Alabama, but could potentially push as far
    north as central Mississippi/Alabama as strong advection continues
    into the evening. Effective shear of 50-60 kts will favor organized storms/bowing segments. This shear will initially be roughly
    parallel to the front, but, as the front surges southeast, shear
    vectors will have a greater cross-boundary component. Strong
    low-level shear will also be in place with a 45-55 kt low-level jet
    moving from Louisiana during the morning into Mississippi/Alabama
    during the afternoon.

    The current expectation is for morning storms near the Sabine Valley
    to gradually intensify as they move northeast into a modestly
    destabilizing boundary-layer. How these storms evolve is uncertain.
    Damaging winds are a likely hazard, but, depending on storm mode and
    the degree of heating in Mississippi, could also pose a similar risk
    for tornadoes. Storms along the front are not likely to make much
    progress southeastward until the late afternoon. As the front moves,
    convective transport of the strong wind fields will promote damaging
    winds and strong low-level shear will bring a risk for embedded circulations/QLCS tornadoes. Discrete development ahead of the front
    during the evening is possible given strong theta-e advection and
    weak capping, but synoptic ascent will be displaced north which
    reduces confidence in that scenario. Surface-based storms become
    much less likely into Tennessee and Georgia.

    ..Wendt.. 02/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 11 17:34:35 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 111734
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 111732

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1132 AM CST Tue Feb 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MUCH OF THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms will be possible Wednesday afternoon into Wednesday
    night from the Sabine Valley vicinity into far western Georgia.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad trough with multiple embedded mid-level vorticity maxima
    will become more consolidated with a 125 knot mid-level jet streak
    over the Lower Ohio River Valley by 12Z Thursday. At the surface, a
    weak low will move along a frontal zone from West Texas to the Ohio
    Valley and then deepen into the eastern Great Lakes between 06Z and
    12Z Thursday. A broad warm sector will be in place along the Gulf
    Coast states and will attempt to progress inland, but extensive
    precipitation within a warm air advection zone from northern
    Louisiana to northern Georgia will stunt its northward progress.

    ...Southeast...
    There is a consistent signal among 12Z CAM guidance for a line of
    storms to either develop south of or emanate from an expansive area
    of precipitation across Louisiana tomorrow morning. There will be a
    period of time during the afternoon when this line of storms may
    have sufficient instability (amid a strongly sheared environment) to
    support a damaging wind threat and tornado threat, particularly with
    any embedded supercells). However, by late afternoon/evening this
    line of storms will weaken as it moves east of the better
    instability.

    An additional severe weather threat will evolve from the late
    afternoon into the overnight hours as the surface front surges
    southeast and the low-level jet strengthens. This threat will begin
    across eastern Louisiana. Earlier in the afternoon, winds will be
    veered across this region, but as the front sharpens and the
    low-level jet strengthens, winds are expected to back somewhat which
    will increase low-level convergence along the front and strengthen
    low-level shear. The southeastward acceleration of the surface front
    may eventually outrun the line of storms given the mean storm motion
    vector, however, 12Z guidance has indicated a greater threat for a
    pre-frontal band of supercells after 06Z across southern Alabama and
    the western Florida Panhandle. This scenario seems reasonable given
    the stronger low-level jet forecast between 06Z and 12Z and also
    based on current (17Z) surface observations showing dewpoints 2 to 3
    F greater than most guidance today. A pre-frontal band of supercells
    would continue the severe weather threat, including the tornado
    threat, through the entire overnight period. The slight risk has
    been expanded south and east to address this concern.

    ..Bentley.. 02/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 12 06:38:18 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 120638
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 120636

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1236 AM CST Wed Feb 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...SOUTHEAST ALABAMA...SOUTHWEST GEORGIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated, marginally severe storms are possible early Thursday
    morning in parts of the Florida Panhandle, southeast Alabama, and
    southwest Georgia. Damaging winds and brief tornado or two are the
    primary threats.

    ...Synopsis...
    A potent upper-level trough and associated strong jet streak will
    move through the Ohio Valley and into the Mid-Atlantic/New England
    through the day on Thursday. Strong flow will extend southward into
    the Southeast and North Florida. In California, a strong upper
    trough will impact the northern/central coast late in the period. A
    cold front is forecast to be near the Alabama/Georgia border in the
    morning and move eastward and offshore by the afternoon.

    A few thunderstorms may occur in the southern Appalachians/Piedmont
    before weakening as they encounter less stable air to the east.
    Additional isolated thunderstorms are possible in portions of
    northern/central California as strong forcing and cold temperatures
    aloft move inland. Severe weather is not expected in either area.

    ...Florida Panhandle and adjacent Alabama/Georgia...
    A line of convection is expected to be ongoing Thursday morning from
    the Florida Panhandle into southeast Alabama and southwest Georgia.
    Waning instability should generally limit the overall strength of
    the line and low-level wind fields will be weakening with time as
    well. However, at least a few hours of strong to marginally severe
    storms are possible. Isolated damaging winds and a brief tornado or
    two are the expected hazards. There is some uncertainty as to where
    the line of convection will be. The current probabilities attempt to
    capture the envelope of model solutions. Adjustments will likely
    occur as confidence increases in placement.

    ..Wendt.. 02/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 12 17:10:15 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 121706
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 121705

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1105 AM CST Wed Feb 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...SOUTHEAST ALABAMA...AND SOUTHERN
    GEORGIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated, marginally severe storms are possible early Thursday
    morning in parts of the Florida Panhandle, southeast Alabama, and
    southern Georgia. Damaging winds and brief tornado or two are the
    primary threats.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong mid-level trough and associated surface low will
    amplify/deepen across the northeast Thursday morning with a trailing
    cold front extending southward along the Appalachians and into
    southeast Alabama and the Florida Panhandle. This front will move
    off the Atlantic Coast by Thursday evening with high pressure
    building in across much of the eastern CONUS in its wake. Meanwhile,
    a strong surface low will approach the northern California/southwest
    Oregon Coast during the day Thursday.

    ...Southeast...
    A line of thunderstorms will be ongoing at the beginning of the
    period from central Georgia and perhaps into South Carolina and
    southern North Carolina to the Florida Peninsula. By 12Z the
    greatest severe weather threat will likely be focused across
    southern Georgia where mid-60s dewpoints are forecast. A strong (50
    knot) low-level jet is forecast to be in place at 12Z, but will
    weaken through the morning as the primary surface low quickly moves
    farther away to the northeast. During this period in the morning
    with a strong low-level jet and ample instability, a threat for
    damaging wind gusts and perhaps a tornado or two will remain. This
    front is expected to move offshore by mid afternoon and thunderstorm
    intensity will likely have likely waned by this time due to the
    weakening forcing.

    ...Northern California...
    A strong surface low of the northern California coast will result in
    favorable shear across much of central and northern California
    tomorrow. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible across
    much of this region with weak instability present. If any pockets of
    greater (250-500 J/kg) MLCAPE can develop during the day Thursday
    when shear remains strong, a damaging wind gust or tornado is
    possible. However, at this time forecast soundings show the greater
    instability arriving beneath the upper-level low when shear will
    also be reduced. Therefore, given the lack of overlap between
    greater instability and shear, no Marginal Risk was added at this
    time.

    ..Bentley.. 02/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 13 06:25:19 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 130625
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 130623

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1223 AM CST Thu Feb 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are possible from the Sabine Valley into the Ozarks
    and Mid-South on Friday. Additional isolated storms are possible in
    the southern Great Basin/Four Corners vicinity. Severe weather is
    not currently expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong upper-level trough will move eastward through the Great
    Basin and reach the Southwest by early Saturday morning. At the
    surface, a lee cyclone will develop in eastern Colorado and evolve southeastward into the southern Plains. A cold front will move into
    the southern Plains and extent northeastward into the Upper Midwest.
    Moisture will begin to rapidly return Friday afternoon into the
    lower Mississippi Valley and parts of East Texas.

    ...Sabine Valley/Ozarks/Mid-South...
    As the upper trough approaches and warm advection intensifies during
    the evening/overnight Friday, a few storms may develop from the
    ArkLaTex into the Ozarks. Additional storm development is likely to
    occur later farther east in the Mid-South. The thermodynamic
    environment is expected to limit severe potential in the Mid-South.
    Within the ArkLaTex/Ozarks, current guidance suggests scattered
    storms are probable. The environment here will have strong shear,
    but will only have modest mid-level lapse rates/buoyancy. Given the
    marginal thermodynamics in addition to storm interactions, the
    coverage of marginally severe hail is expected to be quite limited.
    Small hail appears more probable in the strongest storms. Farther
    south, low-level moisture will be greater, but warm air aloft
    currently appears that it will suppress any deep convection.

    ...Southern Great Basin/Four Corners...
    Modest surface heating with 500 mb temperatures around -25 C will
    promote isolated convection capable of sporadic lightning. Buoyancy
    will be minimal and severe weather is not likely.

    ..Wendt.. 02/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 13 17:23:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 131723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 131722

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL
    1122 AM CST Thu Feb 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are possible from the Sabine Valley into the Ozarks
    and Mid-South on Friday. Additional isolated storms are possible in
    the southern Great Basin/Four Corners vicinity. Severe weather is
    not currently expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong upper-level trough will move eastward through the Great
    Basin and reach the Southwest by early Saturday morning. At the
    surface, a lee cyclone will develop in eastern Colorado and evolve southeastward into the southern Plains. A cold front will move into
    the southern Plains and extent northeastward into the Upper Midwest.
    Moisture will begin to rapidly return Friday afternoon into the
    lower Mississippi Valley and parts of East Texas.

    ...Sabine Valley/Ozarks/Mid-South...
    As the upper trough approaches and warm advection intensifies during
    the evening/overnight Friday, a few storms may develop from the
    ArkLaTex into the Ozarks. Additional storm development is likely to
    occur later farther east in the Mid-South. The thermodynamic
    environment is expected to limit severe potential in the Mid-South.
    Within the ArkLaTex/Ozarks, current guidance suggests scattered
    storms are probable. The environment here will have strong shear,
    but will only have modest mid-level lapse rates/buoyancy. Given the
    marginal thermodynamics in addition to storm interactions, the
    coverage of marginally severe hail is expected to be quite limited.
    Small hail appears more probable in the strongest storms. Farther
    south, low-level moisture will be greater, but warm air aloft
    currently appears that it will suppress any deep convection.

    ...Southern Great Basin/Four Corners...
    Modest surface heating with 500 mb temperatures around -25 C will
    promote isolated convection capable of sporadic lightning. Buoyancy
    will be minimal and severe weather is not likely.

    ..15_ows.. 02/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 13 17:48:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 131748
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 131722

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL
    1122 AM CST Thu Feb 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are possible from the Sabine Valley into the Ozarks
    and Mid-South on Friday. Additional isolated storms are possible in
    the southern Great Basin/Four Corners vicinity. Severe weather is
    not currently expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong upper-level trough will move eastward through the Great
    Basin and reach the Southwest by early Saturday morning. At the
    surface, a lee cyclone will develop in eastern Colorado and evolve southeastward into the southern Plains. A cold front will move into
    the southern Plains and extent northeastward into the Upper Midwest.
    Moisture will begin to rapidly return Friday afternoon into the
    lower Mississippi Valley and parts of East Texas.

    ...Sabine Valley/Ozarks/Mid-South...
    As the upper trough approaches and warm advection intensifies during
    the evening/overnight Friday, a few storms may develop from the
    ArkLaTex into the Ozarks. Additional storm development is likely to
    occur later farther east in the Mid-South. The thermodynamic
    environment is expected to limit severe potential in the Mid-South.
    Within the ArkLaTex/Ozarks, current guidance suggests scattered
    storms are probable. The environment here will have strong shear,
    but will only have modest mid-level lapse rates/buoyancy. Given the
    marginal thermodynamics in addition to storm interactions, the
    coverage of marginally severe hail is expected to be quite limited.
    Small hail appears more probable in the strongest storms. Farther
    south, low-level moisture will be greater, but warm air aloft
    currently appears that it will suppress any deep convection.

    ...Southern Great Basin/Four Corners...
    Modest surface heating with 500 mb temperatures around -25 C will
    promote isolated convection capable of sporadic lightning. Buoyancy
    will be minimal and severe weather is not likely.

    ..15_ows.. 02/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 14 06:52:27 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 140652
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 140650

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1250 AM CST Fri Feb 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS EXTREME
    EAST TEXAS...NORTHERN LOUISIANA...SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS...SOUTHWEST TENNESSEE...MUCH OF MISSISSIPPI...AND WEST-CENTRAL ALABAMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe weather is expected from East Texas into much of the
    Southeast and parts of the Mid-South on Saturday. Scattered to
    numerous damaging wind gusts and a few tornadoes are the primary
    threats. Storms are expected from late afternoon through the
    overnight hours.

    ...Mid-South and Southeast...

    An upper trough will migrate east across the Plains to the MS Valley
    on Saturday. Strong southwesterly deep-layer flow, characterized by
    a 500 mb jet streak around 80-100 kt, will overspread the region,
    mainly near/after 00z. As stronger height falls approach the
    ArkLaTex and MS Valley, a low-level jet greater than 50 kt will
    develop from LA into TN/KY. Meanwhile at the surface, southerly
    low-level flow will allow 60s F dewpoints to march northward,
    reaching as far north as western TN. Boundary-layer moisture into
    the mid-60s F is expected to remain south of the MS/TN border.

    A surface low is expected to deepen during the afternoon into the
    nighttime hours as it tracks from AR to OH. A cold front attendant
    to the low will sweep east/southeast from late afternoon into early
    Sunday. Warm advection across this boundary will result in
    widespread showers and isolated thunderstorms from east TX into the
    Lower OH Valley for much of the day. This will limit the northward
    extent of the advancing warm sector, with a warm front expected to
    stall across TN into northern GA. Large-scale ascent is not expected
    to overspread the region until evening, so open warm sector
    convection likely will remain limited diurnally.

    By late afternoon, more robust convection is expected to develop
    along the sharpening cold front from eastern AR into east TX/western
    LA within a plume of 1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE and strong vertical
    shear. A QLCS producing a swath of damaging gusts is likely to move
    across the region through the overnight hours. Favorable low-level
    shear, characterized by enlarged, looping hodographs suggests
    tornadoes also will be possible with mesovortex formation along the
    line, in addition to any line-embedded supercells. A more
    conditional threat exists with any supercells that can develop ahead
    of the line in the open warm sector, something that remains
    uncertain at this time. Any cells that do develop ahead of the line
    will pose a risk for tornadoes and damaging gusts, and could also
    pose a risk for increasing tornado potential as they interact with
    the QLCS.

    The north and east extent of the severe risk areas remains a bit
    uncertain, in part due to cold air damming into the southern
    Appalachians and how much this is able to erode. A general decrease
    in boundary-layer moisture and instability is expected with
    northeast extent during the overnight hours. However, the expected
    intense deep-layer wind field will likely maintain some damaging
    wind and tornado risk into AL and perhaps parts of western GA.

    ..Leitman.. 02/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 14 17:21:35 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 141721
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 141720

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1120 AM CST Fri Feb 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN LOUISIANA...SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS...MUCH OF MISSISSIPPI...FAR SOUTHWEST TENNESSEE...AND WEST-CENTRAL ALABAMA....

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe weather is expected from East Texas into much of the
    Southeast and parts of the Mid-South on Saturday. Scattered to
    numerous damaging wind gusts and a few tornadoes are the primary
    threats. Storms are expected from late afternoon through the
    overnight hours.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will traverse from the Southwest Saturday morning
    to the Mid-Mississippi Valley by 12Z Sunday. As this trough becomes
    negatively tilted after 00Z, the surface low will rapidly deepen by
    10+ mb as it moves from central Arkansas to northeast Ohio. A cold
    front will extend southwest from this surface low and sharpen
    through the evening before advancing east during the late evening
    and into the overnight hours.

    ...Mid-South and Southeast...
    An expansive region of strengthening low-level flow will advance a
    broad warm sector northward across the Gulf Coast states Saturday
    morning. North of this warm front within a 50 knot low-level jet,
    elevated thunderstorms are expected. Weak instability and shear
    should result in mostly sub-severe storms, but isolated large hail
    may be possible. Expect persistent thunderstorm activity along the
    diffuse cold front from far East Texas to the Mid-Mississippi Valley
    through the morning to early afternoon with mostly sub-severe
    storms. However, richer theta-e will interact with the frontal zone
    by mid-to-late afternoon which should result in deeper, more robust
    updrafts. In addition, stronger mid-level flow will start to
    overspread the warm sector, promoting stronger deep-layer shear.
    Supercells are anticipated from southeast Arkansas to southwest
    Tennessee by this time with a threat for all severe weather hazards
    including the potential for a few strong (EF2+) tornadoes. However,
    this window of more discrete storm mode will likely be fairly
    limited as the cold front starts to surge east around 00Z and a
    squall line develops. The environment ahead of this squall line will
    remain favorable for severe wind gusts and QLCS tornadoes through
    the evening. Eventually this squall line will encounter weaker
    instability across central/eastern Tennessee and Alabama and the
    severe weather threat will likely start to wane.

    One exception may be across far southeast Mississippi, southern
    Alabama, and into the Florida Panhandle. After 06Z, some influence
    of the approaching mid-level vorticity maximum could result in more
    robust convection across this region where greater instability will
    remain. The low-level jet is also forecast to strengthen across the
    region during this timeframe with STP values peaking perhaps around
    2 to 3. 12Z CAM guidance suggests the potential for some pre-frontal development late in the period, but they are not overly strong at
    this time. If more robust pre-frontal storms become likely, in
    addition to the QLCS threat associated with the squall line, greater
    tornado probabilities could be needed across this area.

    ..Bentley.. 02/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 15 06:32:11 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 150631
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 150630

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE SOUTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong wind gusts are possible on Sunday, mainly from late
    morning through the afternoon, across portions of the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic.

    ...Southeast to the Mid-Atlantic...

    Convection will be ongoing Sunday morning ahead of an
    eastward-advancing cold front from the FL Panhandle to the western
    Carolinas. This line of storms could produce strong gusts and
    perhaps a tornado across the FL Panhandle/north FL into southern GA
    where mid-60s F dewpoints are forecast amid strong vertical shear.
    However, large-scale ascent associated with an upper trough shifting
    east across the eastern U.S. will gradually become displaced to the
    north with time. Nevertheless, isolated severe potential is expected
    until the front moves offshore the GA coast by 21z.

    Further north into the Carolinas and portions of Delmarva vicinity,
    severe potential is somewhat more uncertain. Boundary-layer moisture
    will remain more limited (upper 50s to low 60s F) and instability
    will be quite weak due to poor lapse rates. However, strong
    large-scale ascent, frontal forcing, and intense south/southwesterly
    flow from around 925mb upward, will likely lend some support to
    strong gusts, even with weak convection that may produce little
    lightning. While poor thermodynamics may limit a more robust severe thunderstorm scenario, will maintain a Marginal risk given intense
    background flow fields. Severe thunderstorm potential should end by
    21-00z as the cold front pushes offshore.

    ..Leitman.. 02/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 15 17:25:42 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 151725
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 151724

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1124 AM CST Sat Feb 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHERN GEORGIA...NORTHERN FLORIDA...AND THE EASTERN HALF OF THE FLORIDA
    PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Locally strong wind gusts are possible Sunday morning, particularly
    across portions of the Southeast but possibly as far north as the
    Mid-Atlantic region.

    ...Synopsis...
    A vigorous/fast-moving short-wave trough -- embedded in broader
    cyclonic flow aloft -- will move quickly eastward across the eastern
    quarter of the U.S. Sunday. As this feature reaches the Atlantic
    Coast/New England by evening, lower-amplitude/westerly flow will
    evolve across much of the rest of the country.

    At the surface, sharp cold front should extend from an eastern Ohio
    low, southward roughly along the Appalachians to the Florida
    Panhandle. This front will move steadily eastward/southeastward,
    and should clear the Middle and Southern Atlantic Coast during the
    afternoon. During the evening and overnight, the occluding/parent
    low is forecast to shift across New England, while the trailing
    front moves eastward across the western Atlantic and southward
    across the Florida Peninsula and Gulf of America through Sunday
    morning. In the wake of this front, Arctic air will gradually
    spread southeastward across the Plains/Midwest, and eventually the
    Northeast.

    ...Southeastern U.S. to the Mid-Atlantic region...
    A band of showers and embedded thunderstorms will be ongoing at the
    start of the period near the advancing cold front. The greatest
    coverage of lightning is expected from the southern Appalachians to
    the Florida Gulf Coast, where a well-organized squall line should be
    ongoing from central Georgia to the Florida Panhandle. Modest CAPE
    across this part of the area will support deeper updrafts, and thus
    greater potential for some downward transport of high-momentum flow
    aloft. Risk for subsequent strong-to-severe gusts at the surface
    appears sufficient to warrant an upgrade to SLGT risk across
    southern Georgia, northern Florida, and central and eastern parts of
    the Florida Panhandle. Storms should reach/clear the South Carolina
    and Georgia coasts around midday, ending the risk over all but
    northern Florida, where wind risk should gradually diminish as
    weakening convection shifts southward through the afternoon.

    Farther north, weaker instability will limit convective
    intensity/depth, with lightning expected to be generally more
    isolated/sporadic with northward extent. Still, with very strong
    flow aloft preceding the upper trough, stronger, fast-moving
    convective elements may still produce gusty winds, and thus
    potential for minor damage locally as far north as the
    Chesapeake/Delmarva area until the primary band of storms moves
    offshore through mid afternoon.

    ..Goss.. 02/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 16 17:11:50 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 161711
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 161710

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1110 AM CST Sun Feb 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few thunderstorms may occur over parts of southern Florida and the
    Keys on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...
    As upper short-wave troughing departs the Northeast Monday, briefly zonal/westerly flow aloft will prevail. Later in the period,
    however, gradual amplification of the flow field will begin over the
    West, as a short-wave trough digs southeastward out of the Pacific
    Northwest across the Great Basin toward the Four Corners region.

    At the surface, a cold front moving eastward across the western
    Atlantic will trail southwestward into southern Florida early in the
    period. Meanwhile, a broad area of lee-side low pressure will
    prevail over the central/southern High Plains, as strong westerlies
    aloft persist ahead of the gradually amplifying western trough. A
    resulting, broad zone of low-level warm advection will remain across
    the central and southern Plains region through the period.

    ...South Florida and the Keys...
    As the trailing portion of the cold front drifts slowly southward
    across southern Florida and the Florida Keys through the first half
    of the period, showers and isolated thunderstorms appear likely.
    The convection should shift southward with time in tandem with the
    progression of the front, with any lingering lightning overnight
    likely to have moved south of the Florida mainland.

    ...Elsewhere...
    Showers -- and a few sporadic lightning flashes -- are expected to
    occur with a diurnally driven peak in activity, from the Pacific
    Northwest east-southeastward into the Wyoming/Colorado vicinity, in
    tandem with progression of the short-wave trough. Any lightning
    activity should remain sparse, thus precluding the need for a 10%
    thunder area.

    ..Goss.. 02/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 17 06:49:30 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 170649
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 170647

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1247 AM CST Mon Feb 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHEAST
    TEXAS AND SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of strong to severe thunderstorms are expected to evolve
    across southeast Texas and portions of southern Louisiana, mainly
    Tuesday evening and into the overnight hours.

    ...Upper TX Coast and Southern LA...

    An upper shortwave trough will move across the Plains to the MS
    Valley on Tuesday. This will bring a swath of enhanced
    mid/upper-level southwesterly flow across the south-central states.
    At the surface, a weak low will traverse the western Gulf Coast
    vicinity to southern MS through the period. Meanwhile, an Arctic
    cold front will surge south/southeast across the region mainly after
    00z and into Wednesday morning.

    Ahead of the cold front, southerly near-surface flow and a
    strengthening southwesterly low-level jet will transport 60s F
    dewpoints northward. However, the northward extent of deeper
    moisture return will be limited to near the I-10 corridor. A cool boundary-layer beneath a warm layer between 925-850 mb will result
    in little surface-based instability. Additionally, nebulous
    large-scale ascent will preclude convective development until near
    00z when the upper trough impinges on the area. Cooling aloft and
    modestly steep midlevel lapse rates amid moistening low/midlevels
    will support MUCAPE values up to around 1000 J/kg. Vertical shear
    will be favorable for organized convection, with elongated/straight
    hodographs forecast above the aforementioned warm layer. While the
    warm sector will be rather limited, and the cold front will quickly
    surge southeast after dark, a few stronger elevated storms will be
    possible. This activity will mainly pose a risk for marginally
    severe hail.

    There is some conditional potential toward the end of the period for near-surface based convection across parts of southern LA. However,
    this is conditional on the northward extent of the warm sector,
    which remains uncertain as the surface low is forecast to track very
    near the coast. If near-surface based storms can develop, some
    potential for strong gusts and a tornado or two will accompany
    storms given very favorable low-level SRH and large/curved low-level hodographs. Will include low tornado probabilities to encompass this
    scenario, though this outcome remains uncertain.

    ..Leitman.. 02/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 17 17:28:30 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 171728
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 171727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1127 AM CST Mon Feb 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF SOUTHEASTERN TEXAS EASTWARD ACROSS SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of strong to severe thunderstorms are expected to evolve
    across southeast Texas and portions of southern Louisiana, mainly
    Tuesday evening and into the overnight hours.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-/upper-level short-wave trough will continue digging
    southeastward across the Four Corners states during the day Tuesday,
    before arcing more eastward into the across the southern Plains
    overnight.

    As this system advances, weak/gradual surface wave development is
    expected along the primary baroclinic zone across Texas during the
    day. With time, as the wave shifts eastward to the Texas Coastal
    Plain by evening, a southward surge of Arctic air will occur in its
    wake. Overnight, this wave should continue eastward roughly along
    the western Gulf Coast, reaching the vicinity of the mouth of the
    Mississippi by 12Z Wednesday. By this time, the trailing cold front
    will likely have reached the western Gulf, with cold air penetrating
    south of the Rio Grande into northern Mexico.

    ...Southeastern Texas eastward across southern Louisiana...
    A broad zone of low-level theta-e advection is expected across all
    but western portions of the southern Plains at the start of the
    period, shifting gradually eastward across the Sabine and Lower
    Mississippi Valleys, and reaching central Gulf Coast and eventually
    the Southeast states overnight.

    As the relatively warm/moist air spreads northward atop a
    still-cool/stable boundary layer, elevated convection is forecast to
    gradually increase/expand across the eastern half of the southern
    Plains and into Arkansas/Louisiana through the day. By late
    afternoon/early evening, some convection will likely have deepened
    sufficiently to produce some lightning, with thunderstorm coverage
    then increasing and spreading eastward through the overnight hours
    in tandem with the advance of the aforementioned surface wave.

    With convection largely remaining elevated, severe potential will
    likely be relegated to marginal hail with a few of the strongest
    storms, largely evolving after sunset. Potential for
    near-surface-based storms will remain confined to southern portions
    of the MRGL risk area, where gusty winds may occur with one or two
    of the strongest storms. Any risk for a tornado will remain even
    more limited -- confined to coastal areas of southern Louisiana, and
    most likely after midnight.

    ..Goss.. 02/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 18 06:24:35 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 180624
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180622

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1222 AM CST Tue Feb 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across portions of the Southeast
    on Wednesday, but severe storms are not expected.

    ...Synopsis...

    A weak surface low is forecast to be near far southeast LA at the
    beginning of the forecast period, with a trailing Arctic cold front
    extending southwest into the western Gulf. Isolated thunderstorms
    will likely be ongoing from southeast LA eastward along the central
    Gulf coast vicinity during the morning. Stronger convection will
    remain over the warmer Gulf waters as the cold front develops
    east/southeast through the day. Poor lapse rates and modest
    boundary-layer moisture ahead of the cold front will preclude much destabilization over land. A couple of thunderstorms may develop
    over the FL Peninsula during the late afternoon/early evening, but
    severe thunderstorms are not expected given the expected poor
    thermodynamic environment.

    ..Leitman.. 02/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 18 17:31:08 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 181731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 181729

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1129 AM CST Tue Feb 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across portions of the coastal
    Southeast and Florida Peninsula on Wednesday, but organized severe
    storms are not currently expected.

    ...Coastal Southeast/Florida...
    The region will be glancingly influenced by cyclonic flow aloft and
    a lead low-amplitude shortwave trough spreading eastward toward the Appalachians and Carolinas. Semi-organized linear convection will
    likely be ongoing Wednesday morning near/ahead of a surface low and
    cold front near the middle Gulf Coast, with this convection/front
    expected to have shifted offshore by 12z Wednesday.

    This convection will probably generally persist east-southeastward
    during the day over the open waters of the northern/eastern Gulf.
    There is the possibility that some of this convection will reach and
    move inland across the west-central Florida, including the general
    Tampa Bay vicinity, during the afternoon. Cloud cover/poor lapse
    rates should tend to hinder destabilization inland, but a few
    stronger storms cannot be entirely discounted across the
    west-central Peninsula. The inland severe-weather potential
    currently appears sufficiently low to preclude wind/tornado
    probabilities, but this will be reevaluated into the Day 1 time
    frame.

    ..Guyer.. 02/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 19 06:17:39 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 190617
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 190615

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1215 AM CST Wed Feb 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...

    Strong surface high pressure and a cold, Arctic airmass will settle
    over much of the CONUS on Thursday. Stable conditions and a dearth
    of boundary-layer moisture behind a cold frontal passage deep into
    the Gulf and offshore the Atlantic coast will preclude thunderstorm
    activity.

    ..Leitman.. 02/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 19 17:10:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 191710
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 191708

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1108 AM CST Wed Feb 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper low will shift east across the OH Valley, with an intense
    upper jet sweeping across the Southeast. As this trough exits the
    East Coast into Friday morning, a weaker wave will progress out of
    the Great Basin into the Four Corners states.

    At the surface, a sprawling area of high pressure will exist over
    the central and eastern CONUS, providing strong offshore flow over
    the Gulf and Atlantic Coasts. Weak instability over far southern FL
    will quickly dissipate as dry air spreads south, and as such
    thunderstorms are not forecast.

    ..Jewell.. 02/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 20 06:22:13 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 200622
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 200620

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1220 AM CST Thu Feb 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Friday.

    ...Synopsis...

    Surface high pressure will envelop much of the CONUS on Friday. A
    prior cold frontal passage into the Gulf, and subsequent intrusion
    of Arctic air over much of the country, will result in cold, dry and
    stable conditions. As such, thunderstorm potential is not expected
    on Friday.

    ..Leitman.. 02/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 20 16:51:13 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 201650
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 201648

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1048 AM CST Thu Feb 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected on Friday.

    ...Synopsis...
    High pressure over much of the CONUS will continue to provide stable
    conditions in terms of thunderstorm potential. Winds along the Gulf
    Coast will gradually veer to easterly as the centroid of the primary
    high moves across the lower MO and OH Valley, with a moist plume
    approaching the south TX Coast by early Saturday. Despite some
    theta-e advection atop the surface stable layer, overall threat of
    elevated thunderstorms appears low given minimal upper support.

    ..Jewell.. 02/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 21 06:30:39 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 210630
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 210628

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 AM CST Fri Feb 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorms are possible from the middle and upper Texas
    Coast toward the Sabine Valley Saturday evening into early Sunday.
    At least some risk of hail may eventually develop.

    ...Synopsis...
    Northwest flow with multiple mid-level shortwave troughs will be
    present across the CONUS on Saturday. One of these troughs will
    advance from the Southwest into the southern Plains. Low-level flow
    will strengthen across the western Gulf with increasing moisture and strengthening isentropic ascent.

    ...Southeast Texas and southern Louisiana...
    An increase in convection is expected along the Gulf Coast during
    the day Saturday and particularly into Saturday night. MUCAPE around
    500 J/kg and effective shear around 30-35 knots may result in a few
    stronger storms. CAPE heavily concentrated within the hail growth
    zone and a cool boundary layer will support the potential for some
    hail, but somewhat limited instability may limit the updraft
    acceleration needed for larger (1.00") hail. If greater instability
    appears more likely, a Marginal Risk may eventually be needed from
    southeast Texas and into coastal Louisiana.

    ..Bentley.. 02/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 21 17:03:22 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 211702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 211700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1100 AM CST Fri Feb 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorms remain possible from the middle and upper
    Texas Coast toward the Sabine Valley Saturday evening into early
    Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...
    Surface high pressure and associated static stability will remain in
    place across much of the CONUS tomorrow (Saturday), inhibiting
    thunderstorm development over most locales. One exception will be
    across eastern TX into LA and extreme southwest MS. Here, low-level warm-air/moisture advection will transpire atop a cool surface
    airmass as a mid-level trough ejects into the southern Plains from
    the Southern Rockies tomorrow afternoon/evening. Deep-layer ascent
    will increase through the period, with isolated to scattered
    thunderstorm development likely by late afternoon over Coastal TX,
    spreading north and east into LA with time. Buoyancy will be
    elevated, characterized by a few hundred J/kg MUCAPE constrained
    above 850 mb. While the anticipated large, elongated hodographs
    would promote enough deep-layer shear to support some hail growth in
    the stronger storms, buoyancy currently appears too scant to support
    an organized severe hail risk.

    ..Squitieri.. 02/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 22 06:54:48 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 220654
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 220653

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1253 AM CST Sat Feb 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are forecast across portions of southern Louisiana and
    immediate surrounding areas on Sunday. No severe weather is
    expected.

    ...Discussion...
    Elevated thunderstorms will be ongoing across the Gulf at the
    beginning of the period with some lightning activity possible across
    much of southern Louisiana and perhaps parts of Southeast Texas. The
    greater instability, and thus the best chance for marginal severe
    hail, will remain well offshore in the central Gulf. By Sunday
    evening, the surface low and associated surface front will move far
    enough southeast into the central Gulf to bring an end to
    thunderstorm activity by mid to late evening. These thunderstorms
    may approach the Florida coast by late in the period, but are
    expected to arrive after 12Z.

    ..Bentley.. 02/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 22 17:13:49 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 221713
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 221712

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1112 AM CST Sat Feb 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are forecast across portions of southern Louisiana and
    immediate surrounding areas on Sunday. Additional isolated
    thunderstorms may occur in portions of coastal Oregon/Washington. No
    severe weather is expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    Cool and stable conditions at the surface will continue to prevail
    across the CONUS on Sunday. A shortwave trough moving southeastward
    through Texas will induce a weak surface low just south of the
    coastal plain regions. Greater moisture/buoyancy are still expected
    to remain offshore, however. Even so, weak elevated instability will
    exist in portions of southeast Texas into the lower Mississippi
    Valley. Scattered convection may produce lightning, particularly
    near the coast. In the Northwest, an initial compact shortwave will
    move ashore during the late afternoon into the evening. While
    lightning production will be minimal, a few stronger elevated storms
    could become deep enough for charge separation along the immediate
    coast.

    ..Wendt.. 02/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 23 07:04:24 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 230704
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 230702

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0102 AM CST Sun Feb 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few thunderstorms are possible across South Florida and coastal Oregon/Washington on Monday. No severe thunderstorms are expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A positively tilted trough will amplify as it moves from South Texas
    to the Florida Peninsula on Monday. As this occurs, the surface low
    already present over the Gulf will deepen somewhat during the day
    and eventually advance east across the Panhandle and into the
    western Atlantic by 12Z Tuesday. Farther west, a strong mid-level
    jet streak and associated strong surface low will approach the
    Pacific Northwest coast with a cold front advancing inland on Monday evening/Monday night.

    ...South Florida and the Florida Keys...
    A large MCS will likely be ongoing across the eastern Gulf at the
    beginning of the period with a some strong to potentially severe
    thunderstorms ongoing across the open water. However, this MCS will
    weaken as it moves east into lesser instability across and near the
    Florida Peninsula. Some guidance, most notably the 00Z HRRR,
    maintains greater instability across the Keys and far south Florida.
    This could result in an isolated damaging wind gust or even a
    localized tornado threat across south Florida. However, the majority
    of guidance keeps instability well offshore with the strongest
    storms even southwest of the Keys. If a greater instability solution
    does occur across south Florida, a Marginal risk may be needed in
    later outlooks, but the probability of that solution remains too low
    for probabilities at this time.

    ...Northwest...
    A very strong wind field will be present on Monday as a ~985 mb
    surface low moves northeast off the coast. Therefore, some stronger
    wind gusts may be possible with any convection in the region. Weak
    instability depicted by forecast soundings in the area would
    indicate a relatively low threat of convectively induced severe wind
    gusts. However, some convective enhancement of already strong
    synoptic flow may be possible, particularly along the coast.

    ..Bentley.. 02/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 23 17:27:46 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 231727
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 231725

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1125 AM CST Sun Feb 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few thunderstorms are possible across South Florida and coastal Oregon/Washington on Monday. No severe thunderstorms are expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong upper-level shortwave trough will move into the Northwest
    Monday afternoon/evening. A broad upper-level trough in the Gulf
    will sharpen as it approaches South Florida Monday evening. A
    nebulous surface low in the Gulf will accompany the upper trough.
    Diffuse surface boundaries in the eastern Gulf and South Florida
    will be the focus for thunderstorm activity.

    ...South Florida/Keys...
    A cluster of thunderstorms appears likely to be ongoing early Monday
    off the southwestern Florida coast and perhaps near the Keys. This
    activity will likely be east of the surface cold front and driven by
    weak low-level warm advection. Current forecast guidance suggests
    the greatest buoyancy will remain primarily over the Keys. Given the
    stronger southwesterly flow aloft, it is possible a stronger storm
    or two could develop. However, deep-layer shear will be parallel to
    this activity, mid-level height falls will be neutral until late in
    the period, and low-level wind fields will be rather weak. The
    overall potential for even marginally severe storms continues to be
    low. As stronger forcing arrives late, additional activity is
    possible along the surface front in western Florida. However, it is
    not clear if storms would be surface based or if buoyancy would be
    sufficient for a severe threat.

    ...Northwest...
    Strong wind fields will be in place across the region as a surface
    low deepens west of the Olympic Peninsula. A line of at least
    shallow, forced convection will impact portions of coastal
    Washington/Oregon. A few stronger convectively enhanced wind gusts
    are possible among the already strong synoptic flow. These gusts are
    most likely along the immediate coast. Given minimal buoyancy, it
    appears coverage of these convective gusts will be too isolated to
    warrant highlights.

    ..Wendt.. 02/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 24 06:26:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 240625
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 240624

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1224 AM CST Mon Feb 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected across the CONUS on Tuesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level shortwave trough will translate from the Northwest to
    the northern Plains on Tuesday and Tuesday night while another
    mid-level shortwave trough will move from the Great Lakes to the
    Northeast. Instability will be limited in both areas and therefore
    no thunderstorm activity is anticipated. A few thunderstorms may
    develop off the east coast of Florida but should quickly move away
    into the open Atlantic as the mid-level trough and surface low move
    east over the Gulf Stream. No thunderstorms are expected across the
    CONUS on Tuesday.

    ..Bentley.. 02/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 24 16:49:46 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 241649
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 241648

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1048 AM CST Mon Feb 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are not expected across the CONUS on Tuesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A surface low will be present off the eastern Florida coast. The
    parent upper-level trough will be situated along the Florida
    Peninsula. This overall synoptic setup would suggest most of the
    thunderstorm activity should remain offshore. There is perhaps low
    potential for thunderstorms over land very early Tuesday morning,
    but coverage/confidence are too low for general thunderstorm
    highlights. Elsewhere, upper-level shortwave troughs will progress
    through the Ohio Valley and central Plains. Low/mid-level moisture
    appear too limited in both cases for any appreciable thunderstorm
    risk.

    ..Wendt.. 02/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 25 06:52:17 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 250652
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 250650

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1250 AM CST Tue Feb 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible from north Texas to the Ohio
    Valley on Wednesday.

    ...Discussion...
    A mid-level trough will amplify as it moves from the Upper Midwest
    into the Lower Great Lakes and Ohio Valley on Wednesday. A surface
    cold front will accompany this trough as it moves south through the
    day. Moisture will be mostly limited, but there may be enough for
    some weak instability from north Texas to the Ohio Valley. As
    isentropic ascent and convergence along the cold front intensify,
    isolated thunderstorms may develop during the afternoon. Any
    thunderstorm activity should be mostly diurnally driven as elevated
    instability will be minimal after sunset.

    ..Bentley.. 02/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 25 16:59:44 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 251659
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 251657

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1057 AM CST Tue Feb 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across the Midwest region.

    ...Discussion...
    As a short-wave mid-level trough shifts eastward across the Great
    Lakes/Ohio Valley area with time, associated cold mid-level
    temperatures/steep lapse rates aloft will spread across this region.
    This will result in weak instability -- sufficient for sustenance
    of showers and possibly occasional lightning flashes.

    Elsewhere, thunderstorms are not expected.

    ..Goss.. 02/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 26 06:55:55 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 260655
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 260654

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1254 AM CST Wed Feb 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible across parts of the
    southern Appalachians, Carolinas, and southern Virginia on Thursday.

    ...Discussion...
    A mid-level jet streak across the Upper Midwest at 12Z Thursday will
    move quickly through the western Great Lakes and Ohio Valley and
    amplify the mid-level trough approaching the eastern CONUS. As this
    trough sharpens and the surface front becomes more defined, some
    weak instability is forecast to develop ahead of this surface front
    as temperatures warm into the 60s with dewpoints approaching 50F.
    The combination of weak instability and convergence along the cold
    front may be sufficient for a few thunderstorms Thursday afternoon
    and evening. No severe weather is expected.

    ..Bentley.. 02/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 26 17:24:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 261724
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 261722

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1122 AM CST Wed Feb 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are possible from the Mid and
    Upper Ohio Valley to the Carolinas/southern Virginia Thursday.

    ...Discussion...
    An upper trough is forecast to shift eastward across the eastern
    states with time. Within the broader area of cyclonic flow, a shorter-wavelength trough is forecast to dig aggressively
    southeastward out of the Upper Midwest, across the Ohio Valley
    through the day, across the Appalachians during the evening, and
    then should reach the eastern seaboard by the end of the period.

    Cold air/steep lapse rates aloft accompanying the upper trough will
    provide modest CAPE, with background ascent supporting development
    of scattered showers. A few lightning flashes will be possible
    within the evolving convection; the thunder area is being expanded
    to include portions of the Mid and Upper Ohio Valley where a couple
    of weak, low-topped storms may develop near peak heating.

    Elsewhere, thunderstorms are not expected, with the eastern Pacific
    upper low expected to remain offshore through early Friday.

    ..Goss.. 02/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 27 06:54:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 270654
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 270652

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1252 AM CST Thu Feb 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 011200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across parts of central and
    southern California on Friday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will move off the East Coast on Friday with a
    secondary reinforcing trough digging into the Great Lakes in its
    wake. An upper low beneath a ridge across the western CONUS will
    drift slowly east and eventually overspread parts of central and
    southern California Friday night.

    ...Portions of central and southern California...
    Isolated to potentially scattered thunderstorms are forecast, mostly
    Friday evening and Friday night, as temperatures cool aloft as an
    upper low moves inland across central and southern California. While instability may be sufficient for a few thunderstorms, it should
    remain too weak for any appreciable severe weather threat.

    ..Bentley.. 02/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 27 17:12:06 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 271712
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 271710

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1110 AM CST Thu Feb 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 011200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Low thunderstorm chances may develop into parts of southern and
    central California Friday night.

    ...Synopsis...
    Substantial offshore flow will exist along the East Coast and
    trailing into the northern Gulf of America on Friday, as a shortwave
    trough moves out the Northeast. Behind this feature, another wave
    will expand southeastward from the upper MS Valley across the Great
    Lakes and into the Northeast through Saturday morning. Low pressure
    will track across the Great Lakes in association with the developing
    upper trough, with a new surge of high pressure spreading south
    across the northern Plains/Upper MS Valley.

    West of this regime, a compact upper low will move eastward toward
    southern CA, providing increasing lift and cooling aloft, with
    isolated weak thunderstorm activity possible.

    ...Southern CA...
    As the upper low approaches, midlevel temperatures will cool,
    steepening lapse rates. Elevated instability may develop after 00Z
    north of the low where minimal moisture and lift will coexist.
    Forecast soundings suggest a few lightning flashes may result as
    MUCAPE on the order of 100-200 J/kg develops.

    ..Jewell.. 02/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 28 05:02:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 280502
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 280500

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1100 PM CST Thu Feb 27 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The risk for thunderstorms appears negligible across much of the
    U.S. Saturday through Saturday night.

    ...Discussion...
    Models indicate that an amplified split flow, characterized by
    generally high mid/upper heights, will be maintained across the
    eastern Pacific into western North America through this period.
    Within this regime, it appears that an initially slow moving
    mid-level low near the southern California/northern Baja coast will
    accelerate inland across the Southwest Saturday through Saturday
    night, as a more prominent short wave trough digs toward the
    northern and central California coast. However, there remains
    notable spread among the various model output concerning how rapidly
    the lead perturbation transitions to an open wave, and how soon a
    closed low develops within the trailing perturbation.

    Downstream, large-scale mid/upper troughing likely will be
    maintained across much of eastern North America, reinforced by a
    number of digging short wave perturbations, as far south as the
    northeastern Gulf Basin through Florida Peninsula. This is forecast
    to be accompanied by substantive further lower/mid-tropospheric
    drying across much of the northern and eastern Gulf Basin.

    In response to the evolving upstream pattern, a developing southerly
    return flow may contribute to some lower/mid-tropospheric moistening
    east of the Texas Big Bend toward deepening surface troughing to the
    lee of the southern Rockies. However, this is likely to be capped
    by relatively warm and dry layers farther aloft.

    Dry and/or stable conditions are expected to generally prevail
    across much of the remainder of the U.S., as well, with little
    appreciable risk for thunderstorm development.

    ...Southern Great Basin/Southwest...
    There remains sizable spread among the various model output
    concerning the track of the modest mid-level cold core of the inland
    advancing lead short wave trough. Given initially dry conditions,
    and limited moisture return as it progresses inland, latest guidance
    indicates only very weak destabilization beneath the coldest
    mid-level temperatures. Based on NAM/RAP forecast soundings, any
    convection which may become capable of producing lightning probably
    will need forcing augmented by the higher terrain. While a brief
    weak thunderstorm or two might not be out of the question across the
    higher terrain of northwestern Arizona late Saturday afternoon, NCEP
    SREF and HREF calibrated thunderstorm guidance currently suggest
    that 10 percent thunderstorm probabilities might be to high.

    ..Kerr.. 02/28/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 28 17:20:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 281720
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 281718

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1118 AM CST Fri Feb 28 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms cannot be ruled out over parts of northern
    Arizona.

    ...Synopsis...
    On Saturday, a deep and compact upper low will move across southern
    CA/northern Baja into AZ during the day, and into NM by Sunday
    morning. Strong cooling aloft with this system combined with daytime
    heating and upslope flow may yield afternoon/evening convection,
    likely weak as instability will remain minimal. However, the
    favorable ascent coupled with very steep lapse rates may support a
    few general thunderstorms.

    Elsewhere, a large upper trough will exist across the eastern CONUS,
    with high pressure spreading southeastward out of the upper MS
    Valley, maintaining stable conditions.

    ..Jewell.. 02/28/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 1 05:16:47 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 010516
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 010515

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1115 PM CST Fri Feb 28 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS LATE SUNDAY
    AFTERNOON AND EARLY EVENING ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHWESTERN
    KANSAS...NORTHWESTERN OKLAHOMA AND ADJACENT PORTIONS OF THE TEXAS
    PANHANDLE....

    ...SUMMARY...
    An isolated strong to severe thunderstorm or two may impact parts of
    the central Great Plains late Sunday afternoon and early evening,
    posing some risk for severe hail and wind.

    ...Discussion...
    Downstream of an initially strong zonal jet across the mid-latitude
    Pacific, the westerlies are forecast to remain split, with
    relatively high mean mid-level heights across the eastern Pacific
    into western North America. The confluent eastern periphery of this
    regime is forecast to gradually spread east of the Mississippi
    Valley Sunday through Sunday night, in the wake of amplified,
    seasonably cold, large-scale mid-level troughing slowly progressing
    across and east of the Atlantic Seaboard.

    Within the flow emanating from the Pacific, models continue to
    indicate that one significant short wave perturbation will progress
    inland of the Pacific coast into the Great Basin and Southwest.
    This will be preceded by a more compact mid-level low, which is
    forecast to weaken while crossing the southern Rockies through south
    central Great Plains, within broader-scale flow trending more
    anticyclonic.

    As this occurs, in lower levels, models indicate that surface
    troughing will deepen across the central and southern high plains,
    in the wake of surface ridging shifting east of the Mississippi
    Valley through the Atlantic Seaboard. It appears that this will be
    accompanied by strengthening southerly return flow, mainly inland of
    a gradually modifying boundary layer across the western Gulf Basin.

    ...South Central Great Plains...
    Despite limited moisture return within lower/mid-levels, beneath
    relatively warm/dry layers farther aloft, models remain suggestive
    that destabilization will become sufficient to potentially support
    scattered thunderstorm development, aided by favorable large-scale
    ascent. It appears that this will be provided by the lead short
    wave perturbation emerging from the Southwest, though notable
    lingering spread among the various models concerning this feature
    continues to make timing and location somewhat uncertain. This may
    include at least attempts at convection rooted within a weakly
    unstable boundary-layer near the lee surface trough across the Texas
    Panhandle, western Oklahoma, southwestern Kansas vicinity late
    Sunday afternoon. Aided by strong deep-layer wind fields and shear,
    it might not be out the of the question that a cell or two could be
    accompanied by hail and gusty surface winds, which could briefly
    exceed severe limits late Sunday afternoon or early evening.

    ...Central California into Great Basin...
    Beneath stronger mid-level cooling and forcing for ascent forecast
    to overspread the region, destabilization, aided by daytime heating,
    probably will become sufficient for widely scattered weak
    thunderstorms Sunday afternoon and evening.

    ..Kerr.. 03/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 1 17:27:44 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 011726
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 011725

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1125 AM CST Sat Mar 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR THE EASTERN
    TEXAS PANHANDLE...WESTERN OKLAHOMA...PARTS OF SOUTHWEST KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe storms are possible from western North
    Texas into northwest Oklahoma and adjacent southwest Kansas on
    Sunday. Large hail and strong/marginally severe winds are the
    primary hazards.

    ...Synopsis...
    A compact upper low currently in the lower Colorado Valley will
    eject into the southern High Plains by early afternoon on Sunday. A
    modest surface low will develop in response to this feature and will
    generally track through the Texas Panhandle into western/central
    Oklahoma. Moisture return on the western flank of the surface high
    to the east will be relatively weak. However, with 50s F dewpoints
    in portions of Central Texas, it is possible that mid/upper 40s F
    could return into the Texas Panhandle/western Oklahoma vicinity
    during the afternoon.

    ...Eastern Texas Panhandle into western Oklahoma Vicinity...
    With the approach of the compact shortwave trough, some elevated
    showers and embedded thunderstorms are possible Sunday morning. This
    activity will move northeastward and may persist into the early/mid
    afternoon in some areas. The primary severe risk will be associated
    with the surface low and whatever destabilization is able to occur
    in the wake of the early activity. As mentioned, moisture will be
    rather modest. Compensating for this, however, will be very cold
    temperatures aloft (-20 to -22 C in the core of the upper
    low/trough). At lest a narrow band of buoyancy is expected to
    develop in the eastern Texas Panhandle and far western Oklahoma. A
    strong mid-level jet on the southern/eastern flank of the upper
    trough will promote at least marginal supercell structures capable
    of large hail and strong/marginally severe winds. Storms are more
    likely to be elevated farther north into Kansas and east into
    central Oklahoma. Even so, small to marginally severe hail and
    isolated strong gusts would be possible in the strongest storms.

    ..Wendt.. 03/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 2 05:47:18 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 020547
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 020545

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1145 PM CST Sat Mar 01 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS LATE MONDAY
    EVENING INTO EARLY TUESDAY ACROSS MUCH OF CENTRAL INTO EASTERN OKLAHOMA..ADJACENT PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN KANSAS...AND WESTERN NORTH
    TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A rapidly developing line of thunderstorms probably will be
    accompanied by a risk for severe hail, damaging wind gusts and
    perhaps a tornado or two across parts of the southern Great Plains
    by Monday night.

    ...Discussion...
    In the wake of de-amplifying cold, mid/upper troughing shifting away
    from the Atlantic Seaboard, much of North America will be under the
    influence of split flow emanating from the Pacific through this
    period. This regime will remain characterized by relatively high
    mean mid-level heights, but with a couple of significant embedded
    short wave troughs. As one of these progresses across the eastern
    Pacific toward the Pacific coast, a more prominent downstream trough
    appears likely to cross the southern Rockies into the central and
    southern Great Plains by late Monday night.

    The lead trough likely will be comprised of at least a couple of
    notable smaller-scale perturbations, and the details concerning its
    evolution and motion have been varied in the model output. Spread
    remains within the latest model runs, but there appears better
    consensus concerning impacts on convective potential.

    Associated large-scale forcing for ascent is forecast to support
    strong surface cyclogenesis within deepening lee surface troughing,
    across parts of eastern Colorado into western Kansas late Monday
    through Monday night. This likely will be accompanied by
    intensifying southerly low-level wind fields (including 40-50+ kt
    around 850 mb) across much of the southern and central Great Plains
    through lower Missouri Valley, and a gradual increase in moisture
    off a still modifying boundary layer over the western Gulf Basin.

    ...Southern Great Plains...
    By Monday evening, models indicate that low-level moistening may
    include surface dew points increasing into/through the lower to mid
    60s F in a plume across central Texas through much of central
    Oklahoma and adjacent southern Kansas. By around 04/06Z, if not
    earlier, it now appears that destabilization beneath steepening lower/mid-tropospheric lapse rates may yield a narrow corridor of
    mixed-layer CAPE on the order of 500-1000 J/kg near the western edge
    of the moist plume. This probably will be aided by the leading edge
    of mid-level forcing for ascent and cooling, and contribute to the
    initiation of a narrow corridor of thunderstorm development across
    western into central Oklahoma and northwest Texas.

    In the presence of strengthening deep-layer wind fields and shear, a
    couple of supercells are possible before convection consolidates
    into an organizing line. This may be fairly quick, but still
    accompanied by the risk for severe hail, potentially damaging wind
    gusts and perhaps potential for a tornado or two. Stronger
    thunderstorm development probably will tend to develop
    south-southeastward into and across the I-35 corridor overnight,
    associated with the more moist/unstable inflow.

    ..Kerr.. 03/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 2 17:31:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 021731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 021730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1130 AM CST Sun Mar 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF
    CENTRAL/EASTERN OKLAHOMA INTO NORTH TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A rapidly developing line of thunderstorms will bring the potential
    for damaging winds, a few tornadoes, and isolated large hail for
    parts of the southern Plains Monday night.

    ...Synopsis...
    Shortwave, upper-level ridging across the southern Plains will give
    way to a strong upper trough progressing eastward through the
    Southwest on Monday. The strongest mid-level height falls are
    expected to occur during the late evening/overnight period into
    Tuesday morning. As this trough approaches, a central High Plains
    surface low will deepen and evolve southeastward with time. A
    Pacific front will be the focus for thunderstorm development from central/eastern Kansas into the Hill Country/Central Texas.

    ...Oklahoma/Texas...
    A line of thunderstorms is expected to develop along the Pacific
    front late Monday night as strong mid-level ascent overspreads the
    region. The highly amplified/meridional mid/upper-level winds will
    promote a rapid transition to a linear storm mode. Strong deep-layer
    shear and steep mid-level lapse rates could lead to briefly higher
    potential for large hail from initial supercells, but the strong
    signal for a linear storm mode would suggest large hail will likely
    remain isolated. Strong low-level wind fields are expected along and
    ahead of this line of activity. With at least low 60s F dewpoints
    expected in parts central/eastern Oklahoma into North/Central Texas,
    storms will be near-surface based to surface based and capable of
    damaging wind gusts. Low-level hodographs will also be enlarged
    across the warm sector. The exact magnitude of the tornado threat is
    a bit uncertain given the linear storm mode as well as marginal
    low-level instability during the overnight. However, the strength of
    the low-level shear will be sufficient to at least conditionally
    support a few QLCS tornadoes. The eastern extent of the threat will
    be limited by decreasing buoyancy into far eastern
    Oklahoma/Arkansas. The southern edge of the activity also is not
    clear. However, storms on the southern flank may have a greater
    potential to produce large hail. Confidence in the location of this
    activity is too low to increase hail probabilities at this time.

    ...Eastern Kansas...
    How far north surface-based storms will occur remains in question.
    It appears that there is at least marginal potential for
    strong/damaging surface gusts near the surface low track in
    southeast Kansas. Isolated large hail is also possible. In northeast
    Kansas, there is a signal for convection to develop on the nose of
    the low-level jet in some guidance. These storms would likely be
    elevated and have limited potential for damaging winds. Steep
    mid-level lapse rates and adequate deep-layer shear would promote
    some large hail risk.

    ..Wendt.. 03/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 3 05:52:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 030552
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 030550

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1150 PM CST Sun Mar 02 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO
    TUESDAY EVENING ACROSS SOUTHERN ARKANSAS...MUCH OF NORTHERN AND
    CENTRAL LOUISIANA AND CENTRAL/SOUTHERN MISSISSIPPI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    One or two organized lines or clusters of thunderstorms, and perhaps
    a few supercells, will pose a risk for damaging wind gusts, a few
    tornadoes and hail, primarily across parts of the lower Mississippi
    Valley into the Southeast, Tuesday through Tuesday night.

    ...Discussion...
    Model output remains varied concerning sub-synoptic developments
    into and through this period. However, better consensus is evident
    among the various model ensemble output concerning the large-scale
    pattern evolution across the eastern Pacific into North America.
    Within this regime, a significant upper trough, now inland of the
    Pacific coast, is forecast to progress east of the Great Plains
    through Mississippi Valley Tuesday through Tuesday night,
    accompanied by continuing strong cyclogenesis.

    Models generally indicate that the center of the evolving broad and
    deep surface cyclone will migrate from western Kansas through
    northern Illinois during this period. In the wake of the cyclone, a substantive cold front is forecast to surge southeastward across the
    southern Great Plains into northwestern Gulf coast and lower
    Mississippi Valley by 12Z Wednesday. This may be preceded by a more
    modest Pacific cold front across the southern Great Plains at the
    outset of the period, and potentially cool/dry air across/east of
    the lower Mississippi Valley, associated with a surface ridge
    shifting off the Atlantic Seaboard, in the wake of de-amplifying
    large-scale mid/upper troughing.

    A southerly return flow off a modifying boundary-layer over the
    western Gulf Basin is likely to be ongoing early Tuesday across
    eastern Texas toward the lower Missouri Valley, before shifting
    eastward across and east of the lower Mississippi Valley. In
    response to the evolution and progression of the cyclone, models
    suggest that better low-level moisture return from the Gulf will
    probably become cut off across the eastern Gulf Coast region by late
    Tuesday night.

    Across and northeast of a low-level baroclinic zone, initially
    extending across the Ark-La-Tex vicinity southeastward through
    southern portions of the lower Mississippi Valley, the Gulf moisture
    return will initially become elevated above a residual cool/stable surface-based layer. However, the NAM and Rapid Refresh output
    still suggest that this boundary will become more diffuse while
    developing eastward through the day.

    Regardless, most model output remains suggestive that elevated
    and/or closer to surface-based destabilization, and large-scale
    ascent associated with the cyclone, will become sufficient to
    support extensive convective development across the interior U.S.
    Tuesday through Tuesday night, and a fairly broad area with at least
    a conditional risk for severe storms.

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley into Southeast...
    The remnant, though becoming increasingly diffuse, baroclinic zone
    across the lower Mississippi Valley, might become the primary
    initial focus for intense thunderstorm development during this
    period. As the environment destabilizes more rapidly to the
    southwest of this boundary, and low-level warm advection along it
    contributes to large-scale ascent accompanying a short wave
    perturbation overspreading the lower Mississippi Valley, conditions
    may become conducive to the evolution of an organizing storm
    cluster. This may be preceded by a couple of discrete supercells.

    Given the strength of the deep-layer mean wind fields, which may
    include a belt of south-southwesterly flow in the 850-500 mb layer
    on the order of 60-100 kt overspreading Louisiana and Mississippi
    during the day, there appears at least conditional potential for
    supercells capable of producing strong tornadoes. With the
    strongest wind fields generally forecast in the inflow layer of the
    convective development, the extent of the damaging wind potential
    remains more unclear, particularly with any evolving cluster
    developing along/above a maturing cold pool

    Much will also depend on the extent to which near-surface
    thermodynamic profiles are able to destabilize in advance of the
    large-scale forcing. Both the latest Rapid Refresh and NAM forecast
    soundings suggest this may be an issue, and potential mitigating
    factor with regard to the severe wind and tornado potential,
    particularly overnight east of the lower Mississippi Valley into the
    eastern Gulf Coast states.

    ..Kerr.. 03/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 3 17:35:29 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 031735
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 031733

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1133 AM CST Mon Mar 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF
    SOUTHEAST OK...NORTHEAST TX...SOUTHERN AR...CENTRAL/NORTHERN LA...CENTRAL/SOUTHERN MS...SOUTHWEST AL...AND THE WESTERN FL
    PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms with a threat of tornadoes, damaging winds, and
    isolated hail are possible on Tuesday from eastern portions of the
    southern Plains into the lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast. A
    couple strong tornadoes will be possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong and deep mid/upper-level shortwave trough and embedded
    midlevel cyclone will move eastward from the central/southern Great
    Plains into the Mississippi Valley on Tuesday. A deepening surface
    cyclone is forecast to move eastward across KS through the day, and
    then northeastward across parts of MO/IL Tuesday night. Relatively
    modest low-level moisture (with dewpoints in the 40s/low 50s F) will
    stream northward within the warm sector of this cyclone into parts
    of the Midwest, with richer moisture (60s F dewpoints) remaining
    confined to parts of the lower Mississippi Valley and Southeast.

    ...ArkLaTex region into the Lower Mississippi Valley and
    Southeast...
    Organized convection will likely be ongoing at the start of the
    forecast period Tuesday morning across parts of eastern OK/TX and
    perhaps southeast KS. The extent to which the morning convection
    will become surface-based remains somewhat uncertain, but very
    strong low-level and deep-layer shear and sufficient instability
    will support a conditional risk of all severe hazards with the
    early-day storms as they approach the ArkLaTex region.

    A strongly sheared QLCS is expected to approach the lower
    Mississippi Valley region by early afternoon. The magnitude of the
    severe threat with this QLCS, as well as the potential for preceding supercells, will be determined by the extent to which low-level
    moistening can keep pace with the primary convective line. Very
    strong flow in the lowest 3 km and 0-1 km SRH increasing above 400
    m2/s2 will support a threat of potentially widespread damaging winds
    and line-embedded tornadoes wherever the organized QLCS can remain near-surface-based. The potential for longer-lived supercells is
    more uncertain, but cannot be ruled out immediately ahead of the
    QLCS, and also where large-scale ascent is somewhat weaker in closer
    proximity to the Gulf Coast. Any persistent discrete or embedded
    supercells could pose a threat of a strong tornado within the very
    strongly sheared environment.

    The northern/eastern extent of organized severe potential into
    Tuesday night will be constrained by increasingly prohibitive
    low-level stability. However, given the strength of the flow fields,
    any organized convection that persists into late Tuesday and early
    Wednesday could pose some risk of damaging wind, with some tornado
    threat potentially persisting in closer proximity to the Gulf Coast.


    ...Parts of eastern Kansas into Missouri...
    A few strong elevated storms could persist into Tuesday morning
    across parts of eastern KS into MO, potentially posing some threat
    of hail and locally gusty winds. The extent of diurnal heating in
    the wake of morning convection remains uncertain, but some
    surface-based destabilization will be possible during the afternoon
    as the midlevel cyclone and attendant cold temperatures aloft move
    over the region. If sufficient heating/destabilization can occur,
    then robust storm development will be possible in the vicinity of
    the eastward-moving cyclone, posing a risk of isolated hail, strong
    gusts, and possibly a tornado.

    ..Dean.. 03/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 4 06:16:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 040616
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 040614

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1214 AM CST Tue Mar 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WEDNESDAY
    ACROSS PARTS OF EASTERN SOUTH CAROLINA...EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA AND SOUTHEASTERN VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    An intensifying line of thunderstorms may become capable of
    producing strong, damaging wind gusts and a few tornadoes as it
    overspreads the eastern Carolinas and southeastern Virginia mid
    Wednesday morning through Wednesday afternoon.

    ...Discussion...
    The center of a broad and deep, occluding surface cyclone still
    appears likely to migrate across the lower Great Lakes region into
    southwestern Quebec during this period. Associated strong lower/mid-tropospheric wind fields are likely to impact a broad area
    east of the Rockies through the Atlantic Seaboard, initially
    including south-southwesterly flow on the order of 50-70+ kt around
    850 mb, east of deepening surface troughing to the lee of the Blue
    Ridge. It appears that this jet core will gradually shift eastward
    into and across the Mid Atlantic coast by late afternoon, well in
    advance of the primary cold front, which might not advance east of
    the Appalachians until Wednesday evening.

    Guidance continues to indicate that more the substantive low-level
    moisture return off a modifying Gulf boundary layer will become cut
    off across the northeastern Gulf vicinity by early Wednesday.
    However, it remains suggestive that a developing return flow off the
    Atlantic will augment moistening across and inland the Carolina
    coast.

    Models also continue to indicate that destabilization through much
    of the warm sector may only become supportive of weak CAPE on the
    order of 500 J/kg or less. However, given the strength of the wind
    fields, and areas of stronger forcing for ascent, there appears at
    least a conditional risk for severe thunderstorm activity across a
    broad area.

    ...Southern Mid Atlantic...
    It still appears that a remnant convective band emerging from the
    eastern Gulf States will be maintained, with potential for
    substantive intensification as it advances across the Carolina
    Piedmont through Carolina and southeastern Virginia coastal plain
    Wednesday morning into afternoon. Although forecast soundings
    continue to indicate that lower/mid-tropospheric lapse rates will
    not become particularly steep ahead of this convection, it does
    appear that boundary-layer warming and moistening (including surface
    dew points increasing into the lower 60s) will contribute to
    near-surface thermodynamic profiles conducive to downward momentum
    transport. Given the rather large and clockwise curved low-level
    hodographs, a few tornadoes (perhaps a strong tornado or two) are
    possible, in additional to scattered straight-line wind gusts in
    excess of 65 kt.

    ...Allegheny Plateau/Mid Atlantic...
    Early period convective precipitation may contribute to
    boundary-layer moistening, prior to the onset of increasing
    insolation beneath a dry slot overspreading the region during the
    day. Followed by the onset of stronger cooling aloft, model
    forecast soundings indicate the development of thermodynamic
    profiles characterized by modest conditional and convective
    instability, in the presence of strong deep-layer shear. Guidance
    has been varied concerning the location and extent of scattered
    pre-frontal thunderstorm development within this regime, but the
    environment is likely to become at least marginally conducive to
    scattered organized convection, including supercells.

    ..Kerr.. 03/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 4 17:32:14 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 041732
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 041730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1130 AM CST Tue Mar 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS WEDNESDAY
    ACROSS PARTS OF EASTERN SOUTH CAROLINA...EASTERN NORTH
    CAROLINA...AND SOUTHEASTERN VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms capable of producing scattered damaging-wind
    gusts and a few tornadoes are possible Wednesday across parts of the
    eastern Carolinas into southeast Virginia. Other strong to severe
    storms may occur across parts of Florida and east Georgia, and also
    from the Allegheny Plateau into the Mid Atlantic.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong and deep mid/upper-level shortwave trough will move across
    the eastern CONUS Wednesday, as an intense occluding cyclone (with
    central pressure in the 980-985 mb range) moves northeastward from
    central IL toward the lower Great Lakes region and eventually into
    southwestern Quebec.

    While some moistening will occur within the warm sector of the
    cyclone, guidance continues to indicate that destabilization may
    only become supportive of weak CAPE on the order of 500 J/kg or
    less. However, given the intense wind fields and areas of stronger
    ascent, at least a conditional risk for severe thunderstorms is
    expected across a broad area.

    ...Southern Mid Atlantic into the Carolinas and GA/FL...
    A remnant convective band and potential QLCS will likely be ongoing
    Wednesday morning. Moistening and modest destabilization will
    support some intensification as this band moves eastward through the
    day across the Carolina Piedmont region toward the
    Carolina/southeast VA coastal plain. Intense wind fields will
    support a threat of at least scattered damaging winds with these
    storms as they move eastward through the day. In addition, large and clockwise-curved hodographs (with 0-1 km SRH near/above 300 m2/s2)
    will support some tornado potential. A strong tornado will be
    possible, especially if any embedded supercell structures can be
    sustained.

    Other strong to potentially severe storms will be possible from
    eastern GA into the FL Peninsula, primarily early in the day before
    convection moves offshore.

    ...Allegheny Plateau into the northern Mid Atlantic...
    Low-level moistening beneath increasingly prominent midlevel cooling
    and drying will support modest destabilization from parts of the
    Allegheny Plateau into the northern Mid Atlantic region. While
    diurnal convection that develops within this regime may remain
    relatively low-topped, effective shear will remain supportive of
    organized storms, including potential for a couple supercells and/or
    organized line segments. Damaging winds, isolated hail, and possibly
    a tornado or two could accompany the strongest storms across this
    region, especially during the afternoon and early evening.

    ..Dean.. 03/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 5 05:13:39 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 050513
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 050512

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1112 PM CST Tue Mar 04 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorm activity is possible across parts of central
    California and the Great Basin into the Southern Rockies Thursday
    into Thursday evening, but the risk for severe thunderstorms appears
    neglible.

    ...Discussion...
    The center of a broad and deep, occluding cyclone is forecast to
    progress across the lower Great Lakes into southwestern Quebec by
    12Z Thursday, when a significant trailing cold front may be offshore
    all the Atlantic Seaboard but perhaps eastern portions of New
    England. It appears that the southwestern flank of this front will
    be in the process of stalling and weakening across the western Gulf
    Basin, and models indicate that the boundary layer may undergo
    substantive modification across the southwestern Gulf toward the
    lower Texas coast vicinity late Thursday through Thursday night.
    This may be accompanied by weak inland boundary-layer moisture
    return beneath warm and capping elevated mixed-layer air across the
    southern Great Plains, as renewed cyclogenesis occurs to the lee of
    the Colorado Rockies.

    Within and beneath a generally confluent mid-level regime to the
    east of the Rockies, the cyclone, and supporting mid-level short
    wave perturbation emerging from larger-scale troughing advancing
    inland of the Pacific coast, are likely to weaken while progressing
    eastward through the central Great Plains Thursday night into early
    Friday.

    Trailing the lead short wave, models indicate that a more prominent
    short wave trough will dig inland across central/southern
    California, and into the lower Colorado Valley by 12Z Friday.

    ...Central California through southern Great Basin/Rockies...
    A swath of stronger mid-level cooling overspreading the region in
    association with the short wave developments is likely to contribute
    to weak destabilization with daytime heating. It appears that this
    will become sufficient to support scattered weak afternoon and
    evening thunderstorm activity, aided by areas of dynamic and
    orographic forcing for ascent.

    ...Cape Cod vicinity...
    Forecast soundings, perhaps most notably the NAM, suggest that lift
    associated with frontal forcing and/or pre-frontal low-level warm
    advection may still be contributing to elevated convective
    development capable of producing lightning around 12Z Thursday,
    before spreading away from the coast by mid/late morning.

    ..Kerr.. 03/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 5 17:25:05 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 051721
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 051719

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1119 AM CST Wed Mar 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms are possible from parts
    of central California into the southern and eastern Great Basin on
    Thursday. Severe weather is not expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    An amplified upper trough will move off the eastern U.S. coast.
    Broadly cyclonic flow across the West will feature two embedded
    shortwave troughs. One will pivot through the Southwest with the
    other digging southwestward along the central/southern California
    coast. A broad surface low in the Intermountain West will evolve
    eastward and deepen within the central Plains by Friday morning.

    Cold temperatures aloft will support isolated convection across
    portions of central California. A surface boundary within the Great
    Basin will also serve as another focus for isolated to widely
    scattered thunderstorms, particularly where surface heating occurs.
    Very limited buoyancy will generally preclude any severe weather
    potential with any of this activity.

    ..Wendt.. 03/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 6 05:48:48 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 060548
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 060547

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1147 PM CST Wed Mar 05 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of thunderstorms appear possible across parts of east
    central Arizona into adjacent portions of western New Mexico on
    Friday, and across parts of central Texas late Friday night, but the
    risk for severe weather appears negligible.

    ...Discussion...
    Models indicate that the center of a broad and deep, occluded
    cyclone will be in the process of weakening across central Quebec,
    with secondary surface cyclogenesis underway near the Canadian
    Maritimes by early Friday. The new cyclone center is then generally
    forecast to migrate northward toward Newfoundland and Labrador
    through 12Z Saturday. In its wake, it appears that cyclonic
    mid-level flow characterized by seasonably low heights will linger
    across the Great Lakes vicinity through Northeast.

    Upstream, as a significant short wave trough and embedded mid-level
    low turn eastward toward the southern Rockies, within an amplified
    belt of westerlies emerging from the mid-latitude Pacific, broad
    downstream ridging is forecast to be maintained across the
    subtropical into southern mid-latitudes, with mid-level flow
    becoming increasing confluent across and east of the central Great
    Plains.

    A lead short wave perturbation emerging from the Intermountain West
    is likely to become increasingly sheared as it accelerates into and
    through the confluent regime, accompanied by a weakening surface low transitioning to a frontal wave across the central Great Plains
    through middle Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Models indicate that
    the trailing cold front may advance through the Cumberland
    Plateau, Mid South and south central Great Plains by late Friday
    night, with a new wave possibly developing along it across parts of
    central Texas toward the end of the period.

    Ahead of the front, a deepening moist boundary-layer may develop
    across the north central Gulf toward adjacent coastal areas.
    However, models indicate that this will remain capped by warm, dry
    air in the lower/mid-troposphere.

    ...Arizona into New Mexico...
    A generally cold boundary layer with limited moisture still seems
    likely to minimize the potential for thunderstorm development
    beneath the mid-level cold pool overspreading the Great Basin into
    Four Corners states Friday through Friday night. However, the
    latest RAP Refresh and High Resolution Ensemble output suggests that thermodynamic profiles might become marginally conducive to
    convection capable of producing lightning by late Friday night,
    near/north of the east central Arizona Mogollon Rim vicinity into
    parts of the Colorado Plateau.

    ...Central into northeast Texas...
    Low-level moistening and forcing for ascent along the frontal zone
    downstream of the developing wave will contribute to weak elevated destabilization by late Friday night. Erosion of mid-level
    inhibition may become sufficient to support the initiation of
    scattered thunderstorms, either shortly before or not long after 12Z
    Saturday.

    ..Kerr.. 03/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 6 17:21:23 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 061721
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 061719

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1119 AM CST Thu Mar 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to widely scattered storms are possible in east-central
    Arizona into west-central New Mexico Friday afternoon/evening.
    Additional storms are possible late Friday night in parts of
    North/Central Texas. Severe weather potential currently appears low.

    ...Synopsis...
    Low-amplitude ridging will be present across the southern Plains and
    Southeast through Friday night. An upper trough in the lower
    Colorado Valley will move eastward through the Southwest and is
    expected to reach the southern High Plains by Saturday morning. A
    surface low, initially in Kansas, will move into the lower Ohio
    Valley, weakening with time. A cold front will push southward into
    Central Texas. A weak frontal cyclone will develop along the
    boundary as the Southwestern trough approaches.

    ...Parts of Central/North Texas...
    Late Friday night into Saturday, storm development is possible along
    and north of the surface cold front. Forcing for ascent will remain
    rather modest and most forecast soundings have some hints of
    mid-level warm air inhibiting development. CAM solutions
    consequently show isolated storms, but vary spatially in terms of
    where storms may initiate. Given the strong southwesterly flow aloft
    and modest elevated buoyancy, the strongest storms could produce at
    least small hail.

    ...Arizona/New Mexico...
    Cold temperatures aloft beneath the upper trough will promote
    isolated to perhaps widely scattered thunderstorms in portions of
    east-central Arizona and west-central New Mexico. With cloud cover
    and precipitation expected within the region, buoyancy and storm
    intensity should remain low.

    ..Wendt.. 03/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 7 06:24:24 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 070624
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 070622

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1222 AM CST Fri Mar 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EAST TEXAS
    TO THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to widely scattered strong to severe thunderstorms may
    occur from portions of East Texas into the Central Gulf Coast region
    on Saturday. Large hail is the primary hazard with the strongest
    storms.

    ...East Texas to Central Gulf Coast Vicinity...

    An upper low and attendant trough over the Southwest Saturday
    morning will shift east toward the southeast Plains/Sabine Valley
    vicinity by Sunday morning. Fast southwesterly mid/upper flow will
    already be in place from the southern Plains to the Southeast,
    though a stronger jet streak will impinge on the Lower MS Valley
    late in the period as stronger height falls spread east ahead of the approaching upper trough. At the surface, a weak low over
    north-central TX will develop east near/just south of the I-20
    corridor into southern AL through Sunday morning. A warm front will
    extend west to east along this corridor, and southerly low-level
    flow will support mid 60s F dewpoints south of this boundary.

    Convection will likely be ongoing or developing within the first
    couple hours of the forecast period Saturday morning across TX.
    Additional convection also is likely along the warm front near the
    central Gulf coast from LA to southern AL. Most convection is
    forecast to be elevated in this persistent warm advection regime.
    Steep midlevel lapse rates will support elevated instability, with
    forecast soundings indicating MUCAPE to 1500 J/kg possible.
    Furthermore, forecast hodographs are elongated/straight above 2-3 km
    amid 35+ kt effective shear magnitudes. This should result in
    organized cells capable of isolated large hail. If any storms can
    become surface-based near the warm front, some tornado potential
    will exist given vertically veering wind profiles/modestly enlarged
    low-level hodographs.

    ..Leitman.. 03/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 7 17:30:55 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 071730
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 071729

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1129 AM CST Fri Mar 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EAST TEXAS
    TO THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to widely scattered strong to severe thunderstorms may
    occur from portions of East Texas into the Central Gulf Coast region
    on Saturday. Large hail is the primary hazard with the strongest
    storms.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper-level trough will eject into the southern Plains during the
    afternoon on Saturday. This feature will progress eastward into
    parts of the lower Mississippi Valley late Saturday into Sunday
    morning. A strong mid-level jet will accompany this trough. At the
    surface, a cold front will be draped across the Mid-South/Southeast
    into North Texas. A weak surface low will develop along the front in Central/East Texas and move into lower Mississippi Valley during the
    evening.

    ...North Texas...
    Convection will likely be ongoing early Saturday morning. Forecast
    soundings indicate sufficient elevated buoyancy, mid-level lapse
    rates, and effective shear to support large hail for an hour or two. Thereafter, buoyancy should quickly decrease.

    ...East Texas into lower Mississippi Valley and western Florida
    Panhandle...
    The cold front may make some southward progress early in the period,
    but is generally expected to stall somewhere in the Gulf Coast
    vicinity. This boundary will demarcate the where the greatest severe
    potential will be as mid/upper 60s F dewpoints are expected south
    of the boundary. While some convection may be ongoing along the
    boundary early in the period, models suggest potential for
    additional development by the evening as stronger mid-level ascent
    approaches. Areas along and south of the cold front will have the
    greatest potential for near-surface to surface based storms. Steep
    mid-level lapse rates and strong deep-layer shear will support a
    threat for large hail, primarily. Depending on the degree of
    surface-based destabilization that occurs, and isolated strong wind
    gusts or perhaps a tornado could also occur. Low-level wind fields
    will not be overly strong, but should be sufficient for those
    conditional risks.

    The overall severe threat will gradually decrease with northern
    extent. However, there will be some elevated buoyancy (perhaps
    500-750 J/kg MUCAPE) north of the boundary along with strong
    deep-layer shear. Small to marginally severe hail could occur with
    the strongest storms.

    ..Wendt.. 03/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 8 06:03:06 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 080602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 080600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1200 AM CST Sat Mar 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE AND NORTHERN FLORIDA INTO SOUTHERN GEORGIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible on Sunday from
    parts of the Florida Panhandle into southern Georgia and North
    Florida.

    ...FL Panhandle/Northern FL into Southern GA...

    A surface warm front is forecast to be draped across southern AL
    toward the FL/GA state line on Sunday. Meanwhile, a weak surface low
    will be positioned over far southern MS/AL with a trailing cold
    front extending into the western Gulf. A southwesterly low-level jet
    around 30-40 kt at 850 mb will maintain a warm advection regime
    ahead of the low and cold front, and areas of thunderstorms will
    likely be ongoing in the vicinity of the warm front Sunday morning. Destabilization will likely be tempered by early convection, and
    storms may mostly be elevated. However, some risk of marginal hail
    or strong gusts will accompany stronger storms during the morning.

    By afternoon, additional thunderstorms may develop across north FL
    ahead of the cold front. This activity may have a better chance to
    become surface-based. Thunderstorm clusters or an isolated supercell
    may produce strong to locally severe gusts. Furthermore, if
    convection can become surface-based and take advantage of somewhat
    enhanced low-level shear in the vicinity of the warm front, a risk
    for a tornado or two is possible.

    ..Leitman.. 03/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 8 17:29:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 081728
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 081727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1127 AM CST Sat Mar 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FLORIDA
    PANHANDLE EASTWARD ACROSS SOUTHERN GEORGIA/NORTHERN FLORIDA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible on Sunday from
    parts of the Florida Panhandle into southern Georgia and North
    Florida.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper low progged to lie near the Arklatex region early in the
    period will steadily eastward, crossing lower Mississippi Valley
    area during the evening, and then advancing across the central Gulf
    Coast States with time.

    As the upper system advances, a weak surface frontal wave over the
    southeastern Louisiana vicinity will move eastward with time along
    the remnant, west-to-east baroclinic zone extending eastward across
    the southern Georgia/northern Florida vicinity. By the end of the
    period, the low is forecast to redevelop off the southeastern U.S.
    coast.

    ...Florida Panhandle eastward across southern Georgia and northern
    Florida...
    Thunderstorms are expected to be ongoing in the vicinity of a
    west-to-east baroclinic zone lying across the area, with a couple of stronger/organized storms potentially embedded within the broader
    area of precipitation.

    As the ongoing storms move eastward/offshore through the day, a new
    round of convective development is forecast to begin by early
    afternoon, ahead of the advancing upper system. However, weak
    instability is forecast to persist through the period, which will
    limit overall severe risk. With that said, amply strong/veering
    flow with height will reside across the region, increasing overnight
    in tandem with the progression of the upper trough. As such,
    local/limited risk for marginal hail, gusty/damaging winds, or even
    a brief tornado will be possible, with a couple of the
    stronger/longer-lived updrafts.

    ..Goss.. 03/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 9 05:54:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 090553
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 090552

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1152 PM CST Sat Mar 08 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across portions of the Florida
    Peninsula and parts of the Carolinas on Monday. Severe storms are
    not expected.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper low over AL Monday morning will shift east, moving offshore
    over the Gulf Stream by evening. At the surface, a low near the GA
    coast will deepen as it shifts northeast over the Atlantic, and a
    trailing cold front will develop southward across the FL Peninsula.
    Isolated thunderstorms may be ongoing near the cold front Monday
    morning and continue sporadically into the afternoon with southward
    extent. Deep-layer flow will be moderately strong, but mostly
    parallel to the cold front. Meanwhile, warm midlevel temperatures
    across FL will result in modest midlevel lapse rates, limiting
    instability (generally less than 750 J/kg MLCAPE). This will largely
    limit severe potential, though a brief strong storm or two could
    produce gusty winds.

    Further north, isolated thunderstorms are possible across parts of
    the Carolinas closer to the surface and upper low. Cold temperatures
    aloft will result in steep midlevel lapse rates and MUCAPE around
    200-400 J/kg. Severe storms are not expected but a couple instances
    of small hail will be possible with mainly elevated convection
    through the afternoon.

    ..Leitman.. 03/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 9 17:24:34 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 091724
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 091722

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1222 PM CDT Sun Mar 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered thunderstorms are possible across portions of the Florida
    Peninsula and parts of the Carolinas Monday. Severe storms are
    unlikely.

    ...Synopsis...
    Split mid-level flow is forecast over the CONUS Monday. An upper low
    moving over the northern Gulf Coast and offshore will be the primary
    feature of interest for convection, as broad-scale ridging persists
    over the central US. Beneath the upper low, a surface cyclone is
    forecast to steadily intensify as it moves offshore over southern
    South Carolina early in the day. Trailing the low, a cold front will
    move eastward over the lower FL Peninsula.

    ...Coastal Carolinas...
    As the upper trough moves offshore, mid-level ascent will overspread
    the strong coastal front over the eastern Carolinas. In response,
    the initially broad surface low will deepen as it moves into the
    Atlantic. Scattered convection is likely to be ongoing through the
    morning within a broader area of precipitation, and should persist
    through much of the day, as isentropic ascent intensifies ahead of
    the deepening coastal low. Weak elevated buoyancy and moderate to
    strong mid-level flow could support a few stronger storms capable of
    an isolated damaging gust or hail. However, the surface-based warm
    sector should remain well offshore, keeping the probability for
    severe storms low.

    ...Florida Peninsula...
    Additional scattered storms are likely to be ongoing along and ahead
    of the cold front over parts of the FL Peninsula early Monday. The
    front is forecast to move quickly eastward, as moderately strong
    deep-layer flow overspreads a narrow warm sector. The weakening
    upper low moving offshore will favor warm midlevel temperatures,
    resulting in only modest mid-level lapse rates and buoyancy. Given
    the relatively poor timing with the diurnal cycle, limited buoyancy
    and modest front-parallel shear, severe potential is low. However, a
    brief strong storm or two could produce damaging gusts across the
    eastern FL coast. Here, more diurnal heating is possible before the
    front moves offshore by early afternoon.

    ..Lyons.. 03/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 10 04:51:47 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 100451
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 100449

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1149 PM CDT Sun Mar 09 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across far southwest California
    Tuesday afternoon/evening. Severe storms are not expected.

    ...Synopsis...

    Generally low-amplitude westerly mid/upper flow will overspread the
    Plains and Southeast ahead of a shortwave upper trough moving into
    the Southwest. At the surface, a prior cold frontal passage deep
    into the Gulf and high pressure over the eastern Gulf/Southeast will
    result in a dearth of boundary layer moisture east of the Rockies
    for much of the period. Further west, a surface low offshore
    southern CA will weaken as it moves east over southern CA during the afternoon/evening. Cool temperatures aloft beneath the upper trough
    will support steep lapse rates and weak instability (MUCAPE
    generally less than 300 J/kg). Isolated thunderstorms will be
    possible offshore and may persist inland across a small part of
    southwest CA.

    ..Leitman.. 03/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 10 16:47:11 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 101647
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 101645

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1145 AM CDT Mon Mar 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible across far southwest California
    and southern/central Arizona Tuesday afternoon/evening. Severe
    storms are not expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A closed upper low, off the coast of southern California Tuesday
    morning, will slowly drift inland across southern California and
    become more of an open wave across southern Arizona by the end of
    the period. The moisture stream ahead of this trough has some
    tropical connection which will bring near 1 inch PWAT values to
    coastal southern California and southern Arizona. This low-level
    moisture, combined with cooling temperatures aloft, will provide an
    environment favorable for scattered thunderstorms Tuesday
    afternoon/evening. Instability should be generally weak (250-500
    J/kg MLCAPE) but greatest beneath the upper low, where mid-level
    flow will also be weak. Therefore, thunderstorm activity should be
    most favored where shear is weakest and thus, the severe weather
    threat should remain minimal. Any marginal severe weather threat
    which may be present will likely be farther south across northern
    Mexico beneath the stronger mid-level flow.

    ..Bentley.. 03/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 11 05:17:13 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 110517
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 110515

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1215 AM CDT Tue Mar 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHEAST OKLAHOMA...NORTHEAST TEXAS...WESTERN ARKANSAS...AND
    EXTREME NORTHWEST LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from eastern
    Texas into southeast Oklahoma, southern Arkansas, northern
    Louisiana, and western Mississippi late Wednesday afternoon and
    evening.

    ...Southeast OK/ArkLaTex into western MS...

    An upper shortwave trough will quickly progress east from the
    southern Rockies/northern Mexico into the southern Plains by
    afternoon, and the South by Thursday morning. The stronger jet
    streak will remain over central/southeast TX before shifting to the
    central Gulf coast overnight. Nevertheless, the left exit region of
    the broader 50-60 kt southwesterly midlevel jet will overspread the
    ArkLaTex region during the afternoon/evening. Meanwhile, a modest
    surface low will move into central OK by late afternoon with a
    dryline extending south near/just east of the I-35 corridor.
    Boundary layer moisture will remain modest, with mainly 50s F
    dewpoints expected across eastern OK into AR. Near-60 F dewpoints
    may approach the Red River, but overall moisture will remain shallow
    and the boundary layer should become well-mixed. Nevertheless,
    supercell wind profiles will be present and cooling aloft will
    support steep midlevel lapse rates. This will foster MLCAPE values
    to around 1500 J/kg.

    Some uncertainty remain regarding storm coverage. Notably, the NAM
    maintains quite strong capping, while the HRRR, RAP, GFS and ECMWF
    guidance are more subdued (or fully erode any capping). A slight
    risk has been added near the dryline, close to the surface triple
    point where deeper, sustained convection appears most likely. Given aforementioned parameter space, large hail and strong gusts are the
    most probable storm hazards from late afternoon into Wednesday
    night.

    ..Leitman.. 03/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 11 17:21:46 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 111721
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 111720

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1220 PM CDT Tue Mar 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER NORTHEAST TEXAS...SOUTHEAST OKLAHOMA...SOUTHWEST ARKANSAS...AND NORTHERN
    LOUISIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms producing large hail and localized wind damage
    are likely from northern and eastern Texas into southeast Oklahoma
    across southern Arkansas and northern Louisiana late Wednesday
    afternoon and evening. Isolated severe activity may persist as far
    east as western Mississippi by Thursday morning.

    ...Synopsis...
    On Wednesday, a progressive shortwave trough will move eastward out
    of AZ/NM into the southern Plains, beneath the larger-scale upper
    ridge over the Plains. This wave will be over OK and TX at 00Z, with
    the midlevel speed max nosing toward the ArkLaTex. Substantial
    cooling aloft will occur with this system, resulting in steepening
    lapse rates and increasing instability.

    At the surface, a low will deepen gradually over OK, with a
    front/dryline extending south into central TX. Southerly surface
    winds ahead of the front will bring moisture northward, with near 60
    F dewpoints as far north as southeast OK and southern AR. Though
    winds around 850 mb will veer to west/southwest, deep-layer shear
    will remain strong. The end result should be a concentrated area of
    hail and wind damage.

    ...Northeast TX...southeast OK...southern AR...northern LA...
    Much of the day will be void of thunderstorms as moisture return
    occurs and the trough remains well to the west. However, rapid
    cooling aloft during the late afternoon and evening will overspread
    the diurnally warmed air mass, with MUCAPE to around 1500 J/kg
    developing east of the front which may be near I-35. Winds around
    850 mb will become nearly westerly, but not particularly strong
    north of the midlevel jet, and this may prevent significant drying
    for a time and allow moist parcels near the frontal zone to reach
    the LFC. Given the steeper low-level lapse rates west of the front,
    the westerly flow may support heated parcels from the west with
    moisture mixing vertically near the front.

    Forecast soundings show a capped air mass for much of the day, but
    at least isolated cells are likely to develop with such steep lapse
    rates. The conditional risk of large hail is high, and any storms
    that develop are likely to be severe. Inverted-v profiles exist west
    of the front which supports the notion that at least a narrow zone
    will become uncapped. A storm or two could potentially transition to
    a bow echo with localized wind damage potential, as seen in a few
    CAMs, with perhaps a few storms persisting toward the MS River by
    12Z Thursday.

    ..Jewell.. 03/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 12 05:13:59 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 120513
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 120512

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1212 AM CDT Wed Mar 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF EASTERN MISSISSIPPI...CENTRAL/SOUTHERN ALABAMA...WESTERN
    GEORGIA...AND THE WESTERN FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from eastern
    Mississippi into Alabama, western Georgia, and parts of the Florida
    Panhandle on Thursday.

    ...Southeast...

    An upper shortwave trough will move over the Southeast and offshore
    the Atlantic coast through Thursday evening. The bulk of the
    mid/upper jet streak associated with the trough will remain focused
    over the Gulf. However, increasing northwesterly flow above 700 mb
    will support effective shear magnitudes around 30-40 kt. Meanwhile, elongated/straight hodographs are noted in forecast soundings. Cool temperatures aloft steep midlevel lapse rates will foster MLCAPE
    values to around 750-1200 J/kg.

    Boundary layer moisture will remain modest, generally in the
    mid/upper 50s to near 60 F. Furthermore, a lack of surface
    boundaries to focus thunderstorm initiation may limit storm
    coverage. Nevertheless, a few storms are expected to be ongoing
    Thursday morning across northern MS. This activity may continue to
    propagate southeast into the afternoon. Additional storms will
    develop during the afternoon aided by heating into the 70s F. A few
    organized cells capable of severe hail and locally strong gusts will
    be possible. Some consideration for a Slight risk (level 2 of 5) was
    give, mainly across southern AL into southwest GA and the FL
    Panhandle where somewhat better low-level moisture is forecast.
    However, a lack of stronger forcing and uncertainty regarding storm
    cover precludes higher probabilities at this time.

    ..Leitman.. 03/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 12 16:52:30 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 121651
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 121650

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1150 AM CDT Wed Mar 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS EASTERN
    MISSISSIPPI INTO ALABAMA...WESTERN GEORGIA...AND THE FLORIDA
    PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe thunderstorms producing hail and locally damaging gusts
    are possible from eastern Mississippi into Alabama, western Georgia,
    and parts of the Florida Panhandle on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough will continue eastward across the southeastern
    states on Thursday, with midlevel speed max traversing the northern
    Gulf. The trough will be located over AL at midday, with height
    rises on the back side of the trough across MS and southwest AL
    during the afternoon. Very cold temperatures aloft will exist with
    this system, which will contribute to destabilization despite
    less-than-optimal moisture content.

    Elsewhere, a large and deep upper trough will progress across the
    West, with an intense upper vort max and jet streak moving into the
    southern to central High Plains by Friday morning. Thunderstorms are
    unlikely through Friday morning with this system.

    ...Eastern MS...AL...Western GA...FL Panhandle...
    Areas of early day thunderstorms appear likely over northern MS,
    beneath the upper low. Hail will be possible given such cold
    temperatures aloft. Farther south, uncertainty is high for any
    leftover convection or outflows coming in from the west. If a more
    robust convective system can persist overnight across AR, then
    isolated damaging gusts could occur.

    Later in the day, heating will steepen low-level lapse rates into
    AL, GA and FL. However, the trough will continue moving rather
    quickly, which may tend to shunt the more favorable ascent eastward
    with time. A small area of favorable lift and destabilization may
    develop over southeast AL, southwest GA, and the FL Panhandle, with
    large hail possible given long hodographs and cool air aloft.

    ..Jewell.. 03/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 13 06:03:55 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 130602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 130600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Thu Mar 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS EASTERN MISSOURI...FAR SOUTHEAST IOWA...CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN ILLINOIS...FAR
    WESTERN KENTUCKY...FAR NORTHWEST TENNESSEE...AND EXTREME NORTHEAST
    ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A regional outbreak of severe storms is expected across much of the
    Mississippi Valley, eastward to the Lower Ohio and Tennessee Valleys
    late Friday afternoon into Saturday morning. Widespread damaging
    winds (some greater than 65 kt), several tornadoes (some strong),
    and large hail will all be possible.

    ...Synopsis...

    An intense cyclone will develop from the central Plains to the Upper
    Midwest on Friday. As this system rapidly deepens, an intense jet
    streak (100+ kt at 500 mb) will overspread the Ozarks and Mid-MS
    Valley. Meanwhile, a large area covering much of the MS Valley
    vicinity will see 850-700 mb southwesterly flow around 65-80 kt.
    Southerly low-level flow will transport mid 50s dewpoints as far
    north as IA/northern IL (decreasing with northward extent across the
    Upper Midwest). Richer boundary layer moisture (60s F dewpoints)
    will be confined to the Lower MS Valley and Deep South/TN Valley,
    though near-60 F dewpoints may reach the MS/OH River confluence.
    Rapidly developing convection is expected to develop by late
    afternoon from near a surface low over eastern NE and arcing
    east/southeast along a dryline into the Ozarks. Convection will
    develop northeast across the Mid-MS valley, with additional storms
    develop with southward extent into the Mid-South and TN Valley
    during the nighttime hours.

    ...Mid/Upper Mississippi Valley to the Lower OH/TN Valleys...

    Cold temperatures aloft near the main upper low will support steep
    midlevel lapse rates. While boundary moisture will be modest, MLCAPE
    up to 1000-1500 J/kg is possible. This will support rapid storm
    development amid intense deep-layer shear. Heating ahead of the
    dryline also will support some boundary layer mixing and steepening
    of low-level lapse rates. As a result, a rapidly developing QLCS is
    expected. Convection will shift east/northeast into the nighttime
    hours. Given fast storm motion and the intensity of deep-layer flow,
    swaths of significant wind gusts (greater than 65 kt) are
    anticipated over a large part of the Mid-MS Valley. A gradual
    weakening of convection is expected after midnight with north and
    east extent.

    With southward extent from parts of eastern MO/western IL into the
    Mid-South, some potential for a mix of linear convection and
    supercells appears possible. Vertical shear will support tornadoes
    within linear convection. The environment will especially be
    favorable for strong tornadoes with any supercells that develop.
    This activity may develop a little later than initial convection
    further north, with much of the threat being after dark from
    east-central MO/west-central IL southward to western TN.

    Given the intensity of maximum gusts expected, and widespread
    coverage of damaging gusts, a Moderate risk (level 4 of 5) has been
    included for portions of the Mid-MS Valley vicinity.

    ...MS/AL/TN Overnight...

    Persistent southerly low-level flow will bring mid to possibly upper
    60s F dewpoints northward into the TN Valley overnight. Neutral to
    modest height falls are expected and a persistent, strong low-level
    jet will overspread the region. Forecast soundings indicate very
    favorable thermodynamic and kinematic profiles, which would support
    intense supercells. Forcing mechanisms will be somewhat modest over
    the region, which may limit convective coverage, and a somewhat more conditional risk. However, any storms that develop within this
    environment overnight will pose a risk for strong tornadoes, large
    hail and damaging gusts.

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes vicinity...

    The severe risk will become more marginal into MN/WI/MI. Strong deep
    layer flow will overspread the region and any convection will pose a
    risk of strong gusts. An additional risk for hail also will exist,
    especially with any elevated convection near the warm front
    overnight.

    ..Leitman.. 03/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 13 17:30:25 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 131730
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 131728

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 PM CDT Thu Mar 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN SOUTHEAST
    IA...EASTERN MO...IL...FAR WESTERN KY/NORTHWEST TN/NORTHEAST AR...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A regional outbreak of severe storms is likely over the Lower/Mid-Missouri/Mississippi Valleys and Lower Ohio Valley late
    Friday afternoon into Saturday morning. Tornadoes, several of which
    could be strong, widespread damaging winds with gusts from 70 to 90
    mph, and scattered large hail up to baseball size will be possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    Primary change this outlook cycle has been to mainly expand
    MRGL/SLGT/ENH damaging wind probabilities west to north in the
    Lower/Mid-MO Valley. No change to the level 4/MDT risk with greater
    uncertainty over the southern extent of widespread damaging wind
    potential into the Mid-South, but where strong tornado potential
    persists.

    ...Lower/Mid-MO, Mid-MS, and Lower OH Valleys...
    A powerful shortwave trough will amplify from the southern High
    Plains into the Upper MS Valley. This will induce further deepening
    of an intense surface cyclone across the central Great Plains to the
    Mid-MO Valley. Initial surface-based thunderstorm development is
    expected by early to mid-afternoon along the northwest periphery of
    a modified moisture plume emanating north from the South-Central
    States. Well-mixed, inverted-v thermodynamic profiles will support
    downward momentum transport in the left-exit region of an intense
    700-mb jet curling across the Ozarks to the Mid-MS Valley. This
    should yield a rapidly progressing QLCS from the Lower to Mid-MO
    Valley across much of the Mid-MS Valley into Friday evening, with
    semi-discrete supercells trailing to the southeast portion of the
    convective plume. Given the fast low to mid-level flow regime,
    embedded gusts from 60-80 kts should be common along with a
    QLCS/embedded supercell tornado threat. The latter will be greater
    with southeast extent where a ribbon of somewhat richer low-level
    moisture should reach the Mid-MS Valley. Convection should tend to
    weaken overnight more quickly on the north end of the outlook area
    as it outpaces the confined surface-based instability plume. But
    some overnight damaging wind/tornado potential should persist across
    the Lower OH Valley.

    ...Mid-South to Lower MS and TN Valleys...
    South of the QLCS regime, forecast confidence in sustaining deep
    convection lowers with southern extent. Persistent southerly
    low-level flow will bring mid to upper 60s F dewpoints northward
    across the region by Friday evening/night. Forecast soundings
    indicate rather favorable thermodynamic and kinematic profiles,
    conditionally supporting intense and long-track supercells. Neutral
    to weak mid-level height falls are expected, with the strong
    low-level jet tending to shift north/east of the Lower MS Valley
    overnight. This suggests forcing mechanisms will be modest, which is
    likely behind guidance spread with the depiction of deep convection
    during the evening and overnight.

    A few broken to semi-discrete supercells appear most probable in the
    Mid-South, posing a risk for strong tornadoes, significant damaging
    wind gusts, and very large hail. These threats appear more
    conditional farther south/east in the Lower MS and TN Valleys.

    ..Grams.. 03/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 14 06:03:11 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 140602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 140600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF LOUISIANNA...MISSISSIPPI...ALABAMA AND THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A tornado outbreak is possible on Saturday across the central Gulf
    Coast States and Deep South into the Tennessee Valley. Numerous
    significant tornadoes, and some long-track tornadoes are expected on
    Saturday afternoon and evening, centered on eastern Louisiana,
    Mississippi, and Alabama. Widespread damaging wind swaths and
    scattered large hail are likely.

    ...Tornado Outbreak Possible Across parts of the Southeast on
    Saturday...
    ...Gulf Coast States/Tennessee Valley/Southern
    Appalachians/Georgia...
    At mid-levels on Saturday, a strong and fast-moving jet streak will
    translate eastward across the southern U.S., as an associated trough
    moves through the Great Plains. Ahead of the system, a moist and
    unstable airmass will be in place across the lower to mid
    Mississippi Valley. Warming surface temperatures in the morning will
    contribute to the development of moderate instability across much of
    the moist airmass. As large-scale ascent increases ahead of the
    approaching jet streak, scattered thunderstorms are expected to
    initiate near the western edge of the moist airmass during the late
    morning, from eastern Louisiana into northwest Mississippi and
    western Tennessee. These storms should become severe rather quickly
    due large-scale forcing, moderate instability and strong deep-layer
    shear. Supercells with large hail, wind damage and a tornado threat
    are expected to develop and move east-northeastward during the
    afternoon across the central Gulf Coast States and Tennessee Valley.

    The exit region of the mid-level jet streak is forecast to move
    across the lower Mississippi Valley and Tennessee during the mid to
    late afternoon, which will be timed well with afternoon max heating.
    Forecast soundings at 21Z across parts of southern and central
    Mississippi have MLCAPE in the 2000 to 3500 J/kg range, with 0-6 km
    shear of 70 to 80 knots. 700-500 mb lapse rates are forecast to be
    near 8 C/km, with 0-3 km storm-relative helicity in the 400 to 500
    m2/s2 range. This will be very favorable for intense severe storms,
    with a threat for tornadoes, wind damage and large hail. Several
    tornadic supercells are expected to develop within this cluster by
    mid to late afternoon as the low-level jet intensifies. Multiple
    long-track high-end tornadoes will be possible. The greatest tornado
    threat is expected to shift into Alabama by early to mid evening,
    with a significant tornado threat also impacting parts of middle
    Tennessee. In addition, supercells are expected to grow upscale into
    a developing MCS, with potential to produce significant severe wind
    gusts above 70 knots and large hail. The severe threat is expected
    to develop eastward into parts of Georgia and the southern
    Appalachians by mid to late evening. A severe threat should continue
    into the overnight.

    ...Ohio Valley/Lower Great Lakes...
    A negatively-tilted mid-level trough will move into the western
    Great Lakes on Saturday, as the southern part of the trough moves
    into the mid to upper Mississippi Valley. Ahead of the system,
    southwest mid-level flow will be in place over most of the Great
    Lakes and Ohio Valley. At the start of the period, a corridor of
    rich low-level moisture is forecast from western Kentucky northward
    into Indiana. Surface dewpoints along this corridor will likely
    range from the mid 50s to the lower 60s F. Early in the period, a
    cluster of strong thunderstorms is forecast to move across the Ohio
    valley. Some of the storms could have severe potential. Wind damage,
    isolated large hail and a few tornadoes will be possible. In the
    wake of this activity, outflow could negatively affect the airmass
    over parts of the Ohio Valley. However, areas that are not affected
    by outflow could re-destabilize, maintaining a severe threat. As the
    exit region of a mid-level jet moves across the Ohio Valley and
    lower Great Lakes during the late afternoon, supercells will be
    possible due to the increasing large-scale ascent and strong
    deep-layer shear. Any supercell could have potential for tornadoes,
    wind damage and hail.

    ..Broyles.. 03/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 14 17:31:59 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 141731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 141730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 PM CDT Fri Mar 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN CENTRAL/SOUTHERN
    PARTS OF MS/AL...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A tornado outbreak is likely on Saturday across the central Gulf
    Coast States and Deep South into the Tennessee Valley. Numerous
    significant tornadoes, some of which should be long-track and
    potentially violent, are expected on Saturday afternoon and evening.
    The most dangerous tornado threat should begin across eastern
    Louisiana and Mississippi during the late morning to afternoon,
    spread across Alabama late day into the evening, and reach western
    parts of the Florida Panhandle and Georgia Saturday night.

    ...Central Gulf Coast/Deep South/TN Valley...
    After collaboration with WFOs BMX/JAN/MOB, an upgrade to a level
    5-HIGH risk appears warranted for the most likely corridor of
    potentially violent tornadoes, peaking tomorrow afternoon and
    evening. A broader level 4-MDT risk has been expanded somewhat
    eastward for the nocturnal significant tornado threat.

    An intense mid-level jet, 100-110 kts at 500 mb, will eject through
    the basal portion of a broad southern Great Plains shortwave trough.
    This will induce secondary cyclogenesis along an initially
    slow-moving baroclinic zone from the Ark-La-Tex to the central Great
    Lakes. Another day of air mass modification ahead of this wave will
    yield a pronounced plume of rich northwest Gulf moisture that should
    be pristine across southeast LA and southern MS through late
    morning. As mid-level height falls overspread the diurnally warming
    air mass, increasing convective development is expected along the
    deepening baroclinic zone, as well as residual outflows to its
    northeast in the TN Valley from prior late D1 convection.

    Steep mid-level lapse rates atop the richly moist boundary layer
    will yield at least moderate MLCAPE from 1500-2500 J/kg across
    eastern LA into central MS. Vertically veering wind profiles with
    strong anvil-level divergence amid the favorable instability should
    support robust updrafts and intense supercells. Low-level shear will
    strengthen midday through the afternoon, yielding potential for a
    tornado outbreak.

    The most probable convective corridor will be along the effective
    outflow boundary across central/northern parts of MS into north AL
    and south TN. Along and south of this will be the most favored
    corridor for long-tracked, discrete supercells. These will likely
    develop within north/south-oriented confluence bands as increasing
    large-scale ascent becomes coincident with the peak heating cycle.
    A volatile combination of kinematic/thermodynamic parameters will
    support potential for long-track, EF3+ tornadoes. The overall
    spatial extent of this threat will be modulated by the degree of
    boundary-layer heating within the mid to upper 60s dew point plume,
    along with where exactly the large-scale outflow boundary sets up
    from late D1/early D2.

    Significant tornado potential, along with very large hail and
    destructive damaging wind gusts, should persist into Saturday night.
    Greater potential for a broken to linear band of thunderstorms is
    anticipated by this time, but wind profiles will still strongly
    favor supercells. As such, a mix of all three hazards may continue
    with sig severe hail potential favored south and sig severe wind
    favored north as the convective band spreads towards the southern
    Appalachians and the northeast Gulf Coast.

    ...OH Valley to central Great Lakes...
    Forecast confidence remains low with regard to severe potential
    north of the TN Valley. Guidance continues to differ on the degree
    of diurnal destabilization in the wake of the D1 shortwave trough
    and deep cyclone tracking into northern Ontario. With increasingly
    widespread Mid/Deep South to TN Valley thunderstorms during the day
    Saturday, the northward extent of appreciable surface-based
    instability appears highly questionable within a predominately
    meridional deep-layer wind profile. Given the fast flow regime
    though, even weak convection late afternoon through Saturday night
    will pose some risk for locally strong gusts and a tornado.

    ..Grams.. 03/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 15 05:32:30 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 150531
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 150530

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 AM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE ATLANTIC COASTAL STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms with a few tornadoes, scattered
    damaging winds, and marginally severe hail will be possible on
    Sunday across parts of the East.

    ...Atlantic Coastal States...
    At the start of the period, a mid-level trough will be located in
    the mid Mississippi Valley, with south-southwest flow in place
    across much of the eastern U.S. A 90 to 100 kt mid-level jet streak
    should be located over the southern Appalachians. At 12Z on Sunday,
    a broken line of strong storms is expected to be ongoing within
    relatively close proximity to this jet. The stronger cells within
    this broken line may be associated with an isolated severe threat,
    as it moves eastward across Virginia, the Carolinas, southeast
    Georgia and northern Florida. The severe threat is expected to ramp
    up during the mid to late morning as surface temperatures warm ahead
    of the line. Isolated severe gusts should occur with the more
    organized short multicell line segments. Cells that remain discrete
    could also have a threat for isolated large hail and tornadoes. The
    tornado threat is expected to remain isolated, with the greatest
    potential in the central Carolinas and south-central Virginia. The
    severe threat is expected to be maintained into the afternoon, as
    the storms move toward the Atlantic Coast. While the shear
    environment will be impressive, instability is forecast to remain
    weak with poor low-level lapse rates. This should keep any severe
    threat relatively isolated.

    ...Southern and Central Appalachians...
    A mid-level trough will move slowly through the mid Mississippi
    Valley on Sunday, as a jet streak translates northeastward into the
    central Appalachians. During the morning, convection that is located
    near a pre-frontal trough, will move eastward away from the higher
    terrain and into the lower elevations of the Atlantic Coastal
    Plains. Further west, a cold front is forecast to advance eastward
    to near the crest of the southern Appalachians by afternoon. Ahead
    of the front, surface heating will take place allowing for weak destabilization. In addition, the environment will consist of cold
    air aloft and strong large-scale ascent near the mid-level jet. This
    should support a marginal severe threat in the afternoon, with
    isolated severe gusts and hail possible. This severe threat could
    extend northeastward into parts of West Virginia and Pennsylvania,
    where weak instability is also forecast to remain weak.

    ..Broyles.. 03/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 15 17:28:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 151727
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 151726

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1226 PM CDT Sat Mar 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE SOUTHEAST
    TO LOWER MID-ATLANTIC STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Sporadic damaging wind swaths and a few tornadoes will be the
    primary threats from Sunday morning through dusk across a broad
    portion of the East.

    ...FL/GA/SC...
    A broken band of thunderstorms should be ongoing at 12Z Sunday from
    parts of north FL into central SC. This activity should be in an
    overall weakening state, as the primary surface cyclone becomes well
    displaced from this region and the band outpaced/overturned the
    central Gulf Coast/Deep South instability plume overnight. Still,
    favorable low-level shear will linger, coincident with at least mid
    60s surface dew points, to warrant a downstream wind/tornado threat
    into early afternoon. The trailing portion of the convective band
    will encounter further diminishing/more veered low-level flow
    southward in the FL Peninsula. This should result in more of a
    damaging wind/isolated hail threat deeper into the afternoon.

    ...NC to Mid-Atlantic States...
    Lower-topped convection should be ongoing across parts of the
    central/southern Appalachians vicinity at 12Z Sunday.
    Destabilization ahead of this activity should be muted by weaker
    mid-level lapse rates and substantially less boundary-layer heating
    relative to the FL Peninsula. But with very strong low-level
    shear/winds, hodographs will remain enlarged for a tornado threat.
    The deep-layer meridional wind profile should tend to mostly
    parallel convective bands, which may temper a more widespread
    damaging wind threat. There is some signal in guidance at a
    secondary round of late afternoon to early evening redevelopment
    into the Piedmont with boundary-layer recovery in the wake of
    early-day activity. Confidence in this scenario is low as stronger
    forcing for ascent may be displaced north. As such, a broad level
    2-SLGT risk for wind/tornado remains appropriate at this juncture.

    ...Alleghany Plateau/Upper OH Valley...
    The northern portion of a thin, low-topped convective band may be
    ongoing at 12Z Sunday. Low-level shear will initially be extreme
    ahead of it, but surface-based instability should be scant at most
    through late morning. As such, a conditional, low-probability
    wind/tornado threat appears warranted. Isolated to scattered
    cellular convection may form later along the north/south-oriented
    cold front trailing from the primary surface cyclone advancing from
    Lake Huron into Quebec. Low-level winds will be veered ahead of the
    front, substantially curtailing low-level shear compared to
    mid-morning. But strong deep-layer shear and a well-mixed boundary
    layer could foster locally strong gusts and small hail.

    ..Grams.. 03/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 16 05:42:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 160542
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 160541

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1241 AM CDT Sun Mar 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms will be possible early on Monday across far
    eastern North Carolina, and across parts of the West, but no severe
    threat is expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    Thunderstorms will be possible near Cape Hatteras, North Carolina
    early in the period. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be
    possible Monday afternoon ahead of a mid-level trough moving through California. Storms will be possible from the Pacific Northwest
    Coast, and from the northern and central California into the
    Intermountain West. No severe threat is expected on Monday or Monday
    night across the continental U.S.

    ..Broyles.. 03/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 16 17:03:42 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 161702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 161700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1200 PM CDT Sun Mar 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected Monday.

    ...Discussion...
    A return to negligible severe potential across the CONUS will occur
    on Monday.

    In the West, a broad upper trough will progress with multiple
    embedded shortwave impulses. The primary impulse will move across
    parts of CA into the southern Great Basin, aiding in overall
    amplification of the trough by Monday night. A large plume of cool
    mid-level temperatures combined with modest boundary-layer heating
    should support pockets of scant to meager buoyancy. Low-topped
    convection will be most probable across the Central Valley of CA,
    where thunder coverage may become scattered during the afternoon.
    Weak deep-layer shear is expected where instability develops, north
    of the southern CA jetlet. While small hail and locally gusty winds
    are possible, organized severe storms are not anticipated. Elsewhere
    in the West, thunder coverage should be rather isolated.

    Low-probability thunder with isolated low-topped convection is
    apparent along the immediate NC coast on Monday afternoon. While a
    post-frontal environment, scant buoyancy may develop as a sharp
    gradient in mid-level cooling approaches at peak boundary-layer
    heating.

    ..Grams.. 03/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 17 05:55:23 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 170555
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 170553

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1253 AM CDT Mon Mar 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    EASTERN NEBRASKA...SOUTHERN IOWA AND FAR NORTHWEST MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated, marginally severe hail will be possible during the
    overnight late Tuesday into early Wednesday from eastern Nebraska
    across much of Iowa.

    ...Eastern Nebraska/Iowa/Far Northwest Missouri...
    A trough at mid-levels, will move quickly eastward into the Rockies
    on Tuesday, and into the High Plains Tuesday night. Near the trough, thunderstorm development will likely take place in the Four Corners
    region Tuesday afternoon. Ahead of the trough, a surface low will
    deepen over the central Plains, as a narrow corridor of low-level
    moisture develops from eastern Oklahoma into eastern Kansas and
    northwest Missouri. The low is forecast to move through northeast
    Kansas overnight, with low-level convergence becoming concentrated
    from the surface low northeastward along a warm front into southern
    Iowa. After midnight, thunderstorm development will be possible
    along and north of the front. RAP forecast soundings just to the
    north of the boundary at 06Z/Wednesday show a steep surface
    inversion below 800 mb. MUCAPE is forecast to reach the 750 to 1000
    J/kg range, with 700-500 mb lapse rates of the 8 to 9 C/km.
    Effective shear on the north side of the boundary is forecast to be
    in the 30 to 40 knot range. This environment could be sufficient for
    an isolated large hail threat, associated with elevated rotating
    storms, mainly in the 06Z to 12Z timeframe.

    ..Broyles.. 03/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 17 17:07:56 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 171707
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 171706

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1206 PM CDT Mon Mar 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN NEBRASKA INTO IOWA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated, marginally severe hail will remain possible during the
    overnight late Tuesday into early Wednesday from eastern Nebraska
    across much of Iowa.

    ...Synopsis...
    A pronounced mid-level trough will eject into the Plains states,
    encouraging rapid surface cyclone development and intensification
    along the KS/OK border Tuesday. As this occurs, very strong
    low-level flow will encourage the northward advection of marginal
    moisture across the Plains toward the Midwest. By late Tuesday night
    into Wednesday morning, low-level moisture convergence along the
    terminus of the low-level jet will encourage thunderstorm
    development along an effective warm front. Given strong vertical
    wind shear in proximity to the low-level jet terminus, a few strong
    to potentially severe thunderstorms are possible.

    ...Central Plains/Midwest...
    After 06Z, the nose of a 50+ kt south-southwesterly low-level jet
    will become established roughly along the KS/NE/IA/MO border, where
    isentropic lift will encourage elevated thunderstorm development
    above an inversion layer (roughly 800-700 mb in altitude). Above the
    inversion, forecast soundings show 8-9 C/km mid-level lapse rates
    contributing to 500-1000 J/kg MUCAPE, with elongated/straight
    hodographs contributing to 50 kts of effective bulk shear. This
    environment will support elevated supercells traversing the
    effective warm front with a threat for hail, a few instances of
    which may exceed severe limits. Timing for any severe hail appears
    to fall within the 06-12Z Wednesday morning period.

    ..Squitieri.. 03/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 18 05:57:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 180556
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180555

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1255 AM CDT Tue Mar 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PART OF
    ILLINOIS AND INDIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Wednesday across
    parts of eastern Illinois and western Indiana from mid-afternoon to
    early evening. Severe gusts and hail will be the primary threats.

    ...Upper Midwest/Lower Ohio Valley/Tennessee Valley...
    A broad cyclonic flow pattern will be in place over much of the
    continental U.S. on Wednesday. At the mid-levels, a trough will move
    from the central Plains into the Ozarks, as southwest flow
    strengthens over the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys. At the start of the
    period, a cluster of thunderstorms associated with an isolated large
    hail threat, will be ongoing over parts of Iowa and southern
    Wisconsin. At the surface, a low will move eastward into northern
    Illinois by afternoon, as low-level moisture increases across the
    mid Mississippi Valley. A north-to-south corridor with surface
    dewpoints in the 50s F will setup from southeast Missouri into
    south-central Illinois. A 50 to 60 knot low-level jet will
    consolidate over the extreme western portion of the lower Ohio
    Valley.

    Thunderstorms appear likely to initiate during the mid afternoon,
    along and near the moist axis, and to the west of the low-level jet.
    These storms will move eastward into the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys
    in the late afternoon and early evening. Although instability will
    remain weak along the moist axis, organized cells could develop
    across eastern Illinois and western Indiana within an area of strong large-scale ascent. Forecast soundings in eastern Illinois by late
    afternoon have MUCAPE peaking in the 400 to 600 J/kg range, with
    very strong deep-layer shear in excess of 80 knots. Cells that can
    persist in this environment could produce severe gusts and hail.

    ...Central Gulf Coast States...
    Cyclonically-curved mid-level southwest flow will be in place across
    much of the Southeast on Wednesday. The entrance region of a 90 to
    100 mid-level jet will overspread the Ark-La-Tex, as a cold front
    moves eastward into the central Gulf Coast states. Ahead of the
    front, surface dewpoints will be mostly in the upper 50s and lower
    60s F. During the late afternoon, isolated thunderstorms are
    expected to develop just ahead of the front in an area of focused
    low-level convergence from north-central Mississippi into northwest
    Alabama. Forecast soundings in north-central Mississippi at
    00Z/Thursday have MUCAPE around 500 J/kg, with 0-6 km shear near 70
    knot. This could be enough for an isolated severe threat associated
    with the stronger multicells, and perhaps a rotating storm.
    Marginally severe gusts and hail will be possible.

    ..Broyles.. 03/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 18 17:27:19 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 181726
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 181725

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1225 PM CDT Tue Mar 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN ILLINOIS INTO WESTERN INDIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Wednesday across
    parts of eastern Illinois and western Indiana from mid-afternoon to
    early evening. Severe gusts and hail will be the primary threats,
    though a couple of tornadoes are also possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    A potent mid-level trough will traverse the Plains and overspread
    the MS Valley, encouraging an intense surface cyclone to track from
    the Mid-MO Valley to the Great Lakes on Wednesday. Despite the
    intensity of the surface low and accompanying upper support from the
    mid-level trough, buoyancy is expected to remain scant within the
    warm sector given very limited low-level moisture. Nonetheless,
    strong isallobaric surface flow and the presence of a low-level jet
    ahead of the surface cyclone will allow for the northward advection
    of some moisture (however marginal) to support low-topped storms
    amid a highly sheared airmass. Some of these storms may become
    strong to occasionally severe, particularly in the Midwest toward
    the OH Valley.

    ...Midwest to OH Valley...
    Modest clearing and associated insolation ahead of the surface low
    will promote modest boundary-layer mixing and destabilization amid
    marginal moisture. Surface dewpoints of at least 50 F with the
    aforementioned heating, beneath 7-8 C/km mid-level lapse rates, will
    support 250-750 J/kg SBCAPE by mid to late afternoon. During this
    time frame, surface winds are expected to be backed from the
    southeast, with a 50+ kt southwesterly low-level jet contributing to substantial veering/strengthening of the low-level wind profile.
    Somewhat curved and elongated hodographs will contribute to over 300
    m2/s2 of sfc-3km SRH. Given marginal buoyancy, an arcing band of
    low-topped supercells will precede the surface low, accompanied by a
    damaging gust/hail threat. Furthermore, the strong low-level shear,
    and increasing low-level vertical vorticity (as the surface low
    approaches) will also foster a risk for at least an isolated
    tornado.

    There are some discrepancies among guidance members regarding the
    degree of low-level destabilization across portions of the OH Valley
    ahead of the surface low. RAP forecast soundings show mid 50s F
    surface dewpoints beneath 8+ C/km mid-level rates, supporting a
    relatively higher tornado threat compared to NAM, which shows low
    50s F dewpoints overspread by 6.5-7.5 C/km lapse rates. Higher
    tornado probabilities may be needed in future outlooks if guidance
    consensus depicts more boundary-layer instability.

    ...TN Valley into the Southeast...
    At least isolated thunderstorms are expected to develop by late
    afternoon into evening along the surface cold front, which will
    sweep across the TN Valley/Southeast areas. These storms are
    expected to be low-topped in nature, but highly sheared (given a 40+
    kt southwesterly low-level jet, beneath 80+ kts of southwesterly 500
    mb flow, contributing to 50-70 kts of effective bulk shear). In
    addition to marginal low-level moisture, modest warming in the
    850-700 mb layer will also limit thunderstorm intensity and
    coverage. Given strong low-level and deep-layer directional and
    speed shear, any storms that can become established and sustained
    may become supercellular, posing mainly a risk for a few instances
    of damaging gusts/hail.

    ..Squitieri.. 03/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 19 05:53:36 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 190553
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 190551

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CDT Wed Mar 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm development will be possible on Thursday in parts of
    the Mid-Atlantic and northern Rockies. A severe threat is not
    expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    At mid-levels on Thursday, a trough will move across the Ohio and
    Tennessee Valleys, as a fetch of southwest flow strengthens along
    the East Coast. At the surface, a pre-frontal trough will move
    across the Atlantic Coastal Plains. Ahead of the front, surface
    dewpoints are expected to reach the 50s F across the Mid-Atlantic,
    where weak destabilization will occur. Forecast soundings near the
    moist axis Thursday afternoon in central Virginia have MUCAPE
    peaking around 250 J/kg. As the exit region of the mid-level jet
    passes by, 0-6 km shear is forecast to be in the 80 to 90 knot
    range. Although thunderstorms will be possible across parts of the
    Mid-Atlantic Thursday afternoon, the instability is expected to be
    too weak for a severe threat.

    Elsewhere, isolated thunderstorms will be possible ahead of a
    shortwave mid-level trough, across parts of the northern Rockies and
    northern High Plains. No severe threat is expected across the
    continental U.S. Thursday and Thursday night.

    ..Broyles.. 03/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 19 16:37:50 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 191637
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 191636

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1136 AM CDT Wed Mar 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorm development will be possible on Thursday in parts of
    the Mid-Atlantic and northern Rockies. A severe threat is not
    expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will traverse the Rockies as a second upper
    trough ejects into the Atlantic tomorrow (Thursday). A surface cold
    front will accompany the East Coast trough, immediately preceded by
    marginal low-level moisture (e.g. low 50s F surface dewpoints).
    Scant buoyancy, driven by the meager low-level moisture, may
    encourage the development of a few thunderstorms from the Mid
    Atlantic to Carolina Piedmont region. Given relatively strong flow
    just above the boundary layer, strong wind gusts may occur with a
    few of the storms, but confidence in any appreciable severe gust
    coverage is too low for the addition of severe probabilities at this
    time. Otherwise, the only other location where lightning flashes may
    be observed is over the northern Rockies, where a plume of cold
    temperatures aloft, associated with the western trough, may promote
    enough buoyancy (albeit scant) to support a few thunderstorms.

    ..Squitieri.. 03/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 20 05:45:15 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 200544
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 200542

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1242 AM CDT Thu Mar 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated thunderstorms will be possible on Friday across parts of
    the Pacific Northwest and the Midwest, but no severe threat is
    expected.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    At mid-levels, a shortwave trough will move across the central
    states on Friday, as another shortwave trough moves across the
    Pacific Northwest. Ahead of both of these features, instability will
    be very weak. However, mid-level moisture and large-scale ascent
    should be enough for isolated thunderstorm development across parts
    of the Midwest and Pacific Northwest. No severe threat is expected
    across the continental U.S. on Friday and Friday night.

    ..Broyles.. 03/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 20 17:00:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 201700
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 201659

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1159 AM CDT Thu Mar 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected Friday.

    ...Mid-MO/MS Valleys...
    A compact shortwave impulse currently over the northern Rockies will
    progress across parts of the Mid-MO/MS Valleys Friday. Despite a
    dearth of low-level moisture, diurnally steepening lapse rates along
    with a focused corridor of moderate large-scale ascent should
    support a swath of isolated to scattered low-topped convection,
    primarily from late morning to early evening. Meager buoyancy should
    be adequate for sporadic lightning. Gusty, sub-severe winds may
    accompany this activity, especially across the southern portion of
    the convective threat, owing to a deeper mixed boundary layer and
    30-40 kt 850-mb westerlies.

    ...Northwest...
    The next shortwave trough will move inland of the Pacific Northwest
    coast and reach the northern Rockies by Friday night. Scattered
    low-topped convection should accompany this wave within a confined
    belt of stronger forcing for ascent coincident with scant buoyancy
    at most. Isolated thunderstorms are possible near the Cascades on
    Friday afternoon, shifting east across the Columbia Basin and into
    the northern Rockies through late evening.

    ..Grams.. 03/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 21 06:04:02 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 210602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 210601

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0101 AM CDT Fri Mar 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF EASTERN KANSAS AND INTO MUCH OF MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe thunderstorms capable of producing hail are possible on
    Saturday night across portions of Missouri and adjacent eastern
    Kansas.

    ...Synopsis...
    Weakly cyclonic/fast flow aloft will reside over the U.S. at the
    start of the period, with a short-wave trough crossing the Ohio
    Valley, and a second over the northwestern states. With time, the
    eastern of these two features will shift into/across the Northeast
    and Mid-Atlantic region. An associated cold front will likewise
    cross the Northeast, but lack of buoyancy will prevail. A few
    lightning flashes cannot be ruled out as the system crosses the
    Mid-Atlantic region, but at this time, coverage appears likely to
    remain below 10%

    Meanwhile, the western upper system is forecast to advance
    east-southeastward across the northern Intermountain region through
    the day, and into the northern and central Plains through the second
    half of the period. In tandem, a developing surface cold front is
    expected to shift across the Plains states overnight.
    Scattered/elevated thunderstorms should develop across the Missouri
    vicinity overnight, ahead of this system.

    ...Eastern Kansas into Missouri...
    As the upper trough moves into/across the Plains, a strong southerly
    low-level jet is forecast over the Upper Mississippi Valley
    vicinity. Meanwhile, a secondary southwesterly branch of the
    low-level jet is expected to evolve across Oklahoma/Missouri by late
    evening. Warm/moist advection atop a stable boundary layer should
    lead to sufficient destabilization to allow scattered convective
    development, with greatest CAPE expected from northeastern Kansas
    into northern and central Missouri. Given fairly steep mid-level
    lapse rates, and strong mid-level flow yielding ample shear for
    updraft organization, a few of the stronger storms may become
    capable of producing large hail.

    ..Goss.. 03/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 21 17:12:33 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 211712
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 211711

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1211 PM CDT Fri Mar 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN KANSAS INTO MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few thunderstorms capable of producing isolated severe gusts/hail
    are possible Saturday night into early Sunday morning across
    portions of eastern Kansas into Missouri.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will rapidly traverse the central Rockies and
    eject into the Plains states as another mid-level trough moves into
    the Atlantic tomorrow (Saturday). Surface cyclone development should
    take place over the northern Plains by Saturday afternoon, promoting
    modest moisture return up into the mid-MO Valley as cold
    temperatures aloft advect over the central Rockies/Plains from the
    west. High-based, low-topped convection will become prevalent across
    the Plains, along with gusty conditions during the afternoon, before
    deeper convection becomes established in the low-level warm-air
    advection regime across the MO Valley Saturday night. Isolated
    strong to severe thunderstorms could develop late Saturday
    night/early Sunday morning across eastern KS into MO.

    ...Central/Northern Rockies into the central Plains...
    As the upper trough ejects into the Plains and supports surface low development, cold temperatures aloft (i.e. -20C around 500 mb) will
    support 8+ C/km mid-level lapse rates overspreading a relatively
    deep, dry boundary layer Saturday afternoon. High-based, low-topped
    storms should develop by afternoon peak heating amid vertical
    profiles characterized by wind speeds quickly increasing with
    height. Overall buoyancy should be shallow, with no more than a
    couple hundred J/kg MUCAPE expected. However, some of the more
    robust convective updrafts that develop may be deep enough to
    support both charge separation for lightning flashes, and effective
    downward momentum transport of the stronger flow aloft for strong
    wind gusts given steep lapse rates through the column. However,
    questions remain how prevalent 50+ kt gusts would become with these
    storms, precluding severe probabilities this outlook.

    ...Eastern KS into MO Saturday...
    By late Saturday night, a 50-60 kt southwesterly low-level jet will
    develop around 850 mb, encouraging appreciable low-level warm-air
    and moisture advection ahead of an approaching surface cold front.
    Steep lapse rates will also precede the cold front, supporting at
    least 500-750 J/kg MUCAPE amid largely curved and elongated
    hodographs/well over 50 kts of effective bulk shear. Nearly all of
    this buoyancy is contained above 850 mb, so elevated
    multicells/supercells with an isolated severe gust/hail threat is
    expected late Saturday night into Sunday morning.

    ..Squitieri.. 03/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 06:03:47 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 220602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 220600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Sat Mar 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EASTERN TEXAS
    TO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Afternoon storms from western Tennessee southwestward to
    northeastern Texas may pose a risk for severe wind and hail, and
    possibly a tornado or two.

    ...Synopsis...
    As an eastern U.S. upper trough continues progressing eastward
    toward/across the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic region, a second trough
    is progged to advance southeastward out of the northern
    Intermountain region into/across the northern and central Plains,
    and the Upper Midwest by Sunday morning.

    At the surface, an occluding low -- initially over the Minnesota
    area, is forecast to deepen while shifting eastward into the Upper
    Great Lakes. A trailing cold front will shift south-southeastward
    across the Ozarks and the Red River Valley area, and later the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys.

    ...Eastern Texas northeastward to the Tennessee Valley area...
    Daytime heating ahead of a slowly southeastward-advancing cold front
    will result in modest destabilization across the Tennessee Valley
    area, and more substantial CAPE westward across the Arklatex into
    Texas. While capping will be a concern, resulting in increasingly
    conditional severe risk with westward extent, ascent near the front
    should be sufficient to support scattered to isolated storm
    development -- particularly from the Arklatex to western Tennessee,
    during the afternoon.

    With fast westerly flow aloft, atop south-southwesterlies at low
    levels, shear sufficient for organized/rotating storms suggest that
    stronger storms will be capable of producing hail and locally
    damaging wind gusts. The risk should maximize through late
    afternoon/early evening, and then gradually diminishing in tandem
    with diurnal cooling through mid to late evening.

    ..Goss.. 03/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 07:23:04 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 220723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 220721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0221 AM CDT Sat Mar 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EASTERN TEXAS
    TO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    CORRECTED SYNOPSIS

    ...SUMMARY...
    Afternoon storms from western Tennessee southwestward to
    northeastern Texas may pose a risk for severe wind and hail, and
    possibly a tornado or two.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper trough is expected to continue progressing across the Great
    Lakes region through Monday morning, as a lead feature exits New
    England.

    At the surface, an occluding low -- initially over the Minnesota
    area, is forecast to deepen while shifting eastward into the Upper
    Great Lakes. A trailing cold front will shift south-southeastward
    across the Ozarks and the Red River Valley area, and later the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys.

    ...Eastern Texas northeastward to the Tennessee Valley area...
    Daytime heating ahead of a slowly southeastward-advancing cold front
    will result in modest destabilization across the Tennessee Valley
    area, and more substantial CAPE westward across the Arklatex into
    Texas. While capping will be a concern, resulting in increasingly
    conditional severe risk with westward extent, ascent near the front
    should be sufficient to support scattered to isolated storm
    development -- particularly from the Arklatex to western Tennessee,
    during the afternoon.

    With fast westerly flow aloft, atop south-southwesterlies at low
    levels, shear sufficient for organized/rotating storms suggest that
    stronger storms will be capable of producing hail and locally
    damaging wind gusts. The risk should maximize through late
    afternoon/early evening, and then gradually diminishing in tandem
    with diurnal cooling through mid to late evening.

    ..Goss.. 03/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 22 17:23:08 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 221723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 221721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1221 PM CDT Sat Mar 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF EAST
    TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible during the afternoon and evening
    from East Texas into the Lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys.
    Large hail and damaging gusts will be the main severe hazard, though
    a couple of tornadoes also are possible.

    ...East TX into KY/TN/AL...

    An upper trough over the Plains Sunday morning will shift east,
    extending from the upper Great Lakes to the central Gulf coast by
    Monday morning. A belt of moderate mid/upper westerlies will extend
    from the Ohio Valley south to the Mid-South/Deep South vicinity. A southwesterly low-level jet greater than 40 kt will overspread the
    region during the afternoon, with some intensification of the LLJ
    possible across the Deep South overnight as the upper trough
    deepens. Favorable shear profiles will support organized convection
    during the afternoon and into the overnight period.

    At the surface, a low centered over the Upper Midwest during the
    morning will shift east across the Upper Great Lakes. A trailing
    cold front is forecast to sweep across the outlook area from
    mid-afternoon into the night time hours. South/southwesterly
    low-level flow will transport Gulf moisture northward ahead of the
    front, with 60s F dewpoints possible as far north as western TN. A
    narrow corridor of mid-60s F dewpoints is possible across the MS
    Delta vicinity into coastal LA/TX. Cold temperatures aloft
    (generally from -20 to -16 C) will support steepening midlevel lapse
    rates, and weak to moderate destabilization.

    Weaker destabilization (generally less than 500 J/kg) is expected
    over northern portions of the outlook area where boundary layer
    moisture will be more modest and daytime heating not as strong as
    further south. Nevertheless, stronger large-scale ascent and frontal
    forcing coincident with strong deep-layer flow will support at least
    an isolated risk for damaging gusts/hail.

    Stronger destabilization (1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE) is expected with south/southwest extent. Large-scale ascent will be weaker, but
    frontal forcing should be sufficient for isolated to scattered storm development across LA/MS, with a more conditional risk with
    southwest extent into TX. Forecast soundings will support supercells
    or small line segments. Damaging gusts and large hail will be the
    main concern from late afternoon into the nighttime hours. However,
    a narrow corridor of greater tornado potential appears evident from
    northeast LA into central MS and a couple or tornadoes will be
    possible. The severe risk should gradually wane with southeast
    extent during the overnight hours.

    ..Leitman.. 03/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 23 05:58:11 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 230558
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 230556

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1256 AM CDT Sun Mar 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    CENTRAL GULF COAST REGION AND VICINITY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong/possibly severe thunderstorms will be possible Monday
    morning and afternoon, from southern Louisiana eastward to southern
    Georgia and the Florida Panhandle.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper-level trough is forecast to advance slowly eastward across
    the eastern half of the U.S. on Monday, while ridging expands over
    the West. At the surface, a weakening occluded low will move from
    the Upper Great Lakes eastward to southern Quebec through the
    period. A trailing cold front will initially stretch from the Lower
    Great Lakes to the southern Appalachians, and then westward across
    the Gulf Coast States to Texas. The front will move offshore into
    the western Atlantic through the day, while sagging southward toward
    the Gulf Coast -- where it should then linger through the end of the
    period.

    ...Southern Louisiana to southern Georgia and the Florida
    Panhandle...
    Showers and a few thunderstorms will likely be ongoing near and
    south of the advancing cold front. Some severe risk (mainly
    hail/wind) may accompany a couple of the stronger storms during the
    morning, near the Gulf Coast region. Depending upon convective coverage/evolution through late morning, any pre-frontal heating/destabilization could support
    redevelopment/reintensification of frontal convection, with a
    secondary peak in severe potential possible in this scenario.
    Still, overall risk does not appear to warrant SLGT risk upgrade at
    this time. Storms should weaken into the evening, while also
    shifting gradually southward/offshore.

    ..Goss.. 03/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 23 17:10:07 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 231709
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 231707

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1207 PM CDT Sun Mar 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM SOUTHEAST
    LOUISIANA INTO SOUTHWEST GEORGIA AND THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few strong/possibly severe thunderstorms will be possible Monday
    morning and afternoon, from southern Louisiana eastward to southern
    Georgia and the Florida Panhandle.

    ...Synopsis...

    An amplified upper pattern is forecast across the CONUS on Monday,
    with an upper trough pivoting over the eastern U.S. while an upper
    ridge builds across the West. A surface cold front is forecast to
    extend from the central Appalachians southwest into southern
    MS/AL/LA, and then westward into south-central TX by midday. This
    front will shift south and east offshore the Atlantic coast into
    north FL and the northern Gulf by evening, while the TX portion of
    the front retreats northward during the afternoon and overnight
    period as a warm front.

    ...Southeast LA into southwest GA and the FL Panhandle...

    Morning thunderstorms are likely to be ongoing across the central
    Gulf coast vicinity into southwest GA and the FL Panhandle ahead of
    the main surface cold front. Stronger storms may be capable of
    marginal hail or gusty winds with this initial activity. Another
    round of thunderstorms may develop during the afternoon along the
    cold front, depending on degree of heating and airmass recovery in
    the wake of morning convection. Deep-layer westerly flow will be
    modest, but increasing speed with height will produce
    elongated/straight hodographs. Furthermore, cool temperatures aloft
    (near -15 C at 500 mb) will support midlevel lapse rates near 7
    C/km, and potential MLCAPE values up to 1000-1500 J/kg. This
    suggests any afternoon convection that develops could pose a risk
    for hail.

    ...TX Hill Country/Edward Plateau vicinity...

    A conditional severe thunderstorm risk (hail/strong gusts) could
    exist Monday afternoon if thunderstorms can develop. Low-level
    moisture will increase as a surface warm front lifts north across
    the region. However, large-scale ascent will be nebulous at best
    with no appreciable height falls or shortwave impulses noted across
    the area. Deep-layer flow also will remain weak. Nevertheless, some
    CAMs guidance depicts a couple of storms developing during the
    afternoon/early evening in weak upslope flow. However, NAM and RAP
    soundings suggest weak capping from 850-700 mb. Coupled with
    negligible large-scale ascent, this could very well suppress
    convective development. However, cold temperatures aloft and steep
    midlevel lapse rates will support sizable instability (MLCAPE near
    2000 J/kg). Furthermore, strong heating into the 80s F will result
    in a deeply mixed boundary layer. If a storm can develop, some
    potential for isolated hail and gusty winds would be possible. The
    overall risk appears too limited/conditional to include severe
    probabilities at this time.

    ..Leitman.. 03/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 24 05:59:17 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 240559
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 240557

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1257 AM CDT Mon Mar 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Risk for severe weather appears low at this time across the U.S. on
    Tuesday.

    ...Discussion...
    A very slowly progressing upper pattern -- featuring an eastern U.S.
    trough and a ridge over the interior West -- will persist across the
    U.S. Tuesday. Through the second half of the period, an eastern
    Pacific trough is forecast to impinge on the West Coast.

    At the surface, the primary/remnant surface baroclinic zone -- which
    will have moved off the eastern seaboard prior to the start of the
    period, is forecast to trail westward from Florida to Texas.

    At this time, it appears that showers and a few thunderstorms will
    affect roughly the southern half of Florida during the afternoon, in
    the vicinity of the surface front, and near sea-breeze boundaries
    south of the front. Gusty winds and small hail may occur with one
    or two of the stronger storms.

    Farther west, a very conditional risk for isolated storm development
    appears to exist across central and northern Texas during the
    afternoon. Steep lapse rates/ample CAPE, but modest flow aloft
    suggests disorganized storms, but low/conditional risk for
    near-severe hail and/or wind is apparent. Overnight, elevated
    convection may develop north of the surface front, over the Oklahoma
    vicinity. However, modest CAPE suggests that any hail should remain sub-severe.

    Elsewhere, a few lightning flashes may be possible near Pacific
    Northwest coastal ranges very late in the period, as the upper
    trough approaches. Severe weather is not expected.

    ..Goss.. 03/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 24 17:22:21 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 241722
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 241720

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1220 PM CDT Mon Mar 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not forecast on Tuesday.

    ...FL Peninsula...
    In the wake of a low-amplitude shortwave impulse passage on D1,
    large-scale ascent appears nebulous across the region. Still,
    pronounced boundary-layer heating should yield at least isolated
    thunderstorms Tuesday afternoon, mainly along the east coast sea
    breeze. Cool mid-level temperatures could support hail growth amid
    moderate buoyancy. Modest deep-layer shear should temper the overall
    threat, but a few slow-moving cells with mostly small hail and
    locally strong gusts may occur over southeast FL.

    ...Southern Great Plains...
    Within the periphery of a broad northwest flow regime across the
    central to eastern states, the surface pattern should be
    characterized by a weak southern High Plains trough and a
    quasi-stationary front extending east across north TX towards the
    Red River. Aggressive guidance suggests potential for isolated
    thunder in north-central TX late afternoon to early evening Tuesday
    along the leading edge of slightly greater boundary-layer moisture.
    Otherwise, a modest low-level warm theta-e advection regime north of
    the surface front could support isolated, mainly elevated thunder
    into Tuesday night.

    ...Southern Appalachians/Piedmont to the Upper Midwest...
    A trio of shortwave impulses migrating through the broad
    north-central to eastern CONUS longwave trough may provide adequate
    ascent for very isolated thunder from mid-afternoon to early evening
    Tuesday. Given the west to northwesterly flow regime, buoyancy is
    expected to remain scant at most. Destabilization will largely be
    driven by peak boundary-layer heating ahead of each respective
    impulse. Convection should largely remain low-topped, but sporadic
    flashes may accompany the more sustained cores. Locally gusty winds
    within well-mixed boundary layers are possible.

    ...Western OR...
    Between a northeast Pacific upper trough and an amplified ridge over
    the interior West, a meridional deep-layer flow regime will exist
    along the Pacific Coast. Some models continue to hint at a narrow
    corridor of 700-mb warm theta-e advection supporting very isolated
    convection west of the Cascades in OR by early morning Wednesday.

    ..Grams.. 03/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 25 05:58:27 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 250558
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 250556

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1256 AM CDT Tue Mar 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the
    Pacific Northwest on Wednesday afternoon into the evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    Slow progression of the upper pattern -- a general western
    ridge/eastern trough configuration -- is expected Wednesday.
    Upstream, an eastern Pacific trough/low will strengthen as it nears
    the Pacific Northwest Coast.

    At the surface, a rather ill-defined baroclinic zone will extend
    from Florida to Texas. Meanwhile, a cold front -- associated with a deepening/occluded low off the coast -- will shift into the Pacific
    Northwest through the day.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Ahead of the cold front forecast to move eastward across the area
    during the afternoon and evening, daytime heating of a modestly
    moist boundary layer will result in at least marginal
    destabilization. Questions persist regarding the degree of
    low-level moisture, which will likely modulate storm development and
    subsequent intensity.

    With that said, diffluent flow aloft ahead of the approaching upper
    low, and increasingly strong southerly deep-layer flow would
    otherwise suggest a favorable setup for isolated severe storms. At
    this time, will maintain 5%/MRGL risk for hail/wind, as low-level
    flow/shear should remain weak. However, the favorable overall setup
    could yield greater coverage/risk than currently indicated, and thus modifications in subsequent outlooks may be needed.

    ...Far West Texas vicinity...
    A dry/capped airmass and weak shear is expected across the Permian Basin/Transpecos Region/Davis Mountains. However, presuming an
    isolated storm or two can develop near the dryline, steep lapse
    rates aloft would suggest potential for briefly intense updrafts.
    Any storm which would develop could produce hail/wind, but any risk
    is highly conditional and does not appear to warrant inclusion of a
    risk area at this time.

    ..Goss.. 03/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 25 17:27:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 251726
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 251725

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1225 PM CDT Tue Mar 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
    PACIFIC NORTHWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of the Pacific
    Northwest on Wednesday afternoon and evening. Coverage should be
    mostly isolated, but a more probable corridor for a few supercells
    is apparent west of the Cascades. These may produce large hail, a
    brief tornado, and locally strong gusts.

    ...Pacific Northwest...
    Confidence is sufficient for an upgrade to level 2-SLGT risk for
    large hail, centered along the I-5 corridor in western OR/WA.
    Considered a separate upgrade across northeast OR/southwest WA for
    wind, but confidence is too low to warrant one at this time.

    A vigorous shortwave trough will approach the Pacific Northwest
    coast through the period. A pronounced mid-level jetlet, around
    90-100 kts at 500 mb, should overspread the OR coast to west of the
    Cascades on Wednesday evening. Near record to record high
    temperatures are anticipated downstream amid a preceding highly
    amplified mid/upper ridge shifting east. This combined with well
    above-normal PW values should yield pockets of 500-1000 J/kg MLCAPE
    by Wednesday afternoon. Despite a meridional deep-layer wind
    profile, a few supercells will likely develop west of the Cascades
    as MLCIN wanes towards peak heating. With weak low-level shear,
    large hail should be the primary hazard. A storm or two might
    produce significant severe sizes of 2-2.5 inches before storms
    weaken over the Cascades.

    Farther east, deep-layer shear will be progressively weaker, but the
    boundary layer will be more deeply mixed. Guidance varies greatly
    with the degree of convective coverage in this region into the
    evening. The more aggressive models suggest a thunderstorm cluster
    or two could evolve across northeast OR/southeast WA. Should this
    occur, severe wind gusts would be the primary hazard. Given a subtle delayed/weaker trend in the timing/strength of the parent shortwave
    trough, will maintain broad low probabilities for now.

    ...Lower Rio Grande Valley/South TX...
    Minor mid-level impulses are progged to undercut the highly
    amplified ridge that currently exists from the Rio Grande Valley to
    the Pacific Northwest. Guidance varies in mesoscale spatiotemporal
    aspects of when these impulses cross the Rio Grande into south TX.
    With rich boundary-layer moisture over Deep South TX and potential
    for pronounced diabatic heating, a marginally favorable environment
    for isolated severe hail/wind is apparent. While speeds may be
    modest, a vertically veering wind profile with height could support
    a few slow-moving, transient supercell structures Wednesday
    afternoon/evening.

    ..Grams.. 03/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 26 06:16:07 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 260614
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 260613

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0113 AM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHERN TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible Thursday across parts of
    the southern High Plains, and into southern Texas, as well as over
    the Lower Missouri/Mid-Mississippi Valleys.

    ...Southern High Plains across southern Texas...
    Showers and thunderstorms are forecast to be ongoing early in the
    period, as a slow-moving southern-stream trough moves eastward
    across northern Mexico and Texas through the period. Local risk for
    hail/wind may be ongoing with these storms.

    During the afternoon, isolated high-based convection may develop
    across parts of southeastern New Mexico and Far West Texas. Despite
    modest CAPE/shear, the deep/dry boundary layer may support
    gusty/damaging winds with any stronger storm.

    Farther east, along the Rio Grande, storms will likely develop over
    higher terrain on the Mexican side of the river, and may shift into
    adjacent portions of Texas with time. Meanwhile, remnant outflow
    from earlier convection may focus new storm development, as moderate instability develops due to the moist boundary layer residing
    beneath steep mid-level lapse rates associated with the upper
    system. Low-level southeasterlies veering with height, and
    increasing to 30-plus kt at mid levels, will support
    organized/rotating storms, the strongest of which will be capable of all-hazards severe potential. Risk will likely continue through the
    evening, spreading eastward into southeastern Texas with time.

    ...Middle Missouri Valley area eastward to the Lower Ohio Valley...
    As a warm front advances slowly northward across the central Plains
    and Midwest, several clusters of showers and scattered thunderstorms
    are forecast to develop, and shift east-southeastward within the
    prevailing west-northwesterlies aloft. Isolated afternoon
    surface-based storms may develop over the north-central Kansas
    vicinity, where risk for a few strong wind gusts may occur, along
    with potential for hail. However, more widespread convection during
    the period is forecast north of the warm front. Steep lapse rates
    above the low-level stable air, and amply strong mid-level flow,
    suggests potential for severe-caliber hail.

    ..Goss.. 03/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 26 17:23:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 261723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 261721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1221 PM CDT Wed Mar 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN SOUTH TX AND
    THE LOWER MO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Multiple rounds of severe thunderstorms are possible in south Texas
    with hail and wind as the primary hazards. Across parts of the Lower Missouri/Mid-Mississippi Valleys, isolated to scattered large hail
    and localized severe gusts are possible, mainly during the late
    afternoon and evening.

    ...South TX...
    Extensive deep convection will likely be ongoing across parts of
    south TX Thursday morning, in association with a leading
    low-amplitude shortwave impulse. How far south-southeast attendant
    cold pool/large-scale outflow is uncertain, with the 12Z NAM
    displaced farther northwest than the bulk of preferred guidance.
    This will have profound impacts on spatial extent and amplitude of
    D2 severe potential. Prior overturning/stabilization is likely to be
    much more prominent than indicated by the 12Z NAM.

    Some severe wind/embedded hail threat may accompany the leading
    convection across Deep South TX and the Lower TX Coast, before it
    shifts offshore/weakens through late morning into midday. Trailing
    outflow will serve as a focus for renewed development beyond the
    higher terrain of northeast Mexico. Confidence is low in achieving
    substantial retreat/destabilization north of the outflow. But with
    persistence of weak mid-level troughing upstream and moderate
    mid-level southwesterlies, renewed severe potential may occur across
    parts of south TX Thursday evening/night with slow-moving clusters.
    Embedded supercells could pose a mixed severe hail/wind threat.

    ...Lower MO/Mid-MS Valleys...
    Primary change with this outlook is to add a level 2-SLGT risk
    across parts of the Lower MO Valley for the late afternoon to early
    evening severe threat. Guidance is consistent with sustaining storm
    development along this portion of the warm front, downstream of the
    low-level thermal ridge emanating northeast from the central Great
    Plains. UH/reflectivity signals in 12Z HREF members are seemingly
    subdued relative to the potential thermodynamic environment
    characterized by a confined plume of MLCAPE around 2000 J/kg. This
    region will remain on the southwest fringe of moderate mid-level
    westerlies and hodographs appear modest. Still, adequate veering of
    the wind profile with height in conjunction with rather steep
    mid-level lapse rates should support at least an isolated large hail
    threat, peaking around early evening.

    ..Grams.. 03/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 27 06:03:20 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 270601
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 270600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Thu Mar 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE MISSOURI VALLEY AND INTO THE UPPER GREAT LAKES...AND FROM THE
    EASTERN HALF OF TEXAS TO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AREA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across portions of
    eastern and southern Texas and into southern Arkansas and Louisiana
    Friday, and from Nebraska into parts of the Upper Midwest on Friday evening/night.

    ...Synopsis...
    A slow-moving southern-stream short-wave trough will continue
    shifting across the southern Plains Friday, toward the Lower
    Mississippi Valley. Farther north, a series of vorticity maxima
    will move east-northeastward across the north-central U.S. within
    background west-southwesterly northern-stream flow.

    At the surface, a low initially over the northern Plains is forecast
    to move eastward along a surface warm front, reaching the Upper
    Mississippi Valley by evening, and then continuing across the Great
    Lakes through the end of the period.

    ...Southern and eastern Texas east to southwestern Arkansas and
    Louisiana...
    As the upper trough moves slowly eastward across Texas through the
    day, heating beneath the cool air aloft will result in moderate destabilization. As such, ongoing convection early in the period
    will likely increase during the afternoon, particularly in areas
    relatively undisturbed by prior convection/cloud cover.

    While mid-level flow will remain somewhat modest, low level flow
    veering and increasing with height will provide ample shear for
    organized storms and occasional rotation. Along with potential for
    large hail and damaging winds locally, with a few of the strongest
    storms, a tornado or two will also be possible. Once locations of
    more concentrated afternoon/evening storms can be identified in
    future outlooks, an upgrade to SLGT may be required.

    ...Portions of Nebraska northeastward to the Upper Great Lakes...
    Late afternoon/evening thunderstorms are forecast to evolve in the
    vicinity of a baroclinic zone stretching from Nebraska to the Upper
    Great Lakes, as modest airmass destabilization occurs. With ample
    mid-level flow aloft supporting organized storms, hail and locally
    damaging gusts will be possible with a couple of the stronger storms
    over the Mid Missouri Valley area. Farther east, ahead of the low,
    most of the convection will be elevated north of the warm front,
    with hail possible with stronger storms into the overnight hours.

    ..Goss.. 03/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 27 17:21:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 271721
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 271719

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1219 PM CDT Thu Mar 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
    CENTRAL STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A low-probability tornado and wind threat remains forecast for
    Friday morning through evening across portions of the western Gulf
    Coast States. Isolated severe hail is possible from the Upper
    Midwest into Nebraska on Friday evening/night.

    ...TX Coastal Plain to LA...
    After extensive preceding convection yesterday through today, poor
    mid-level lapse rates will be prevalent across much the region ahead
    of a low-amplitude mid-level trough characterized by embedded
    convectively modified impulses. This trough should drift
    east-northeast across south to east TX during the period. Within the
    rich western Gulf airmass, surface-based destabilization will be
    tempered and deep-layer shear appears modest. But belts of
    moderately enhanced low-level flow could support low-probability
    tornado and wind potential, mainly during the morning to evening.
    These may linger along the southwest LA coast through Friday night.

    ...Upper Midwest to NE..
    Very steep mid-level lapse rates around 8.5-9 C/km will be prevalent
    atop a pronounced surface warm front over WI/MN to a lee trough in
    the central High Plains. Elevated convective potential appears most
    prominent by Friday evening near the Upper Great Lakes, downstream
    of a low-amplitude shortwave impulse progressing east near the
    international border. Surface temperatures may be close to freezing,
    but small to marginally severe hail is possible with fast-moving,
    highly elevated cells along the northern periphery of the EML plume.

    Farther southwest, the degree of low-level moisture relative to the
    stout EML should mitigate appreciable convective potential until
    evening. Convective coverage will probably be sparse as large-scale
    ascent may be limited, but should eventually increase across NE as
    the low-level jet strengthens Friday night. Overall severe potential
    appears likely to remain marginal.

    ..Grams.. 03/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 28 06:10:03 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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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 28 17:30:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 281729
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 281727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1227 PM CDT Fri Mar 28 2025

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF
    NORTHERN OKLAHOMA...EASTERN KANSAS...WESTERN/CENTRAL MISSOURI...

    ...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.

    ...Synopsis...
    The upper-level pattern across the Rockies and Plains will be
    somewhat disorganized. However, two low-amplitude shortwave troughs
    are expected to eject into the Plains during the period. At the
    surface, an initial surface cyclone in western Kansas will evolve
    into two distinct lows as the two shortwave troughs eject in
    succession. One low will move through the lower
    Missouri/mid-Mississippi Valleys while the other will shift through western/central Oklahoma before weakening by Sunday morning.

    ...Eastern Kansas/western/central Missouri/northern Oklahoma...
    Dewpoints should increase ahead of the dryline/cold front during the
    day. Most model guidance suggests upper 50s to low 60s F will be
    possible. Confidence in storm development is highest in these areas.
    Forcing for ascent from the secondary shortwave trough, surface
    low/dryline, and the cold front should promote widely scattered to
    scattered storms initially from north-central Oklahoma into
    northeast Kansas. Effective shear will be strong enough for
    supercells. Near the triple point into southeast Kansas, supercell
    structures have potential to last longer into the evening given the
    more orthogonal shear vector orientation to the dryline. From the
    Flint Hills into northeast Kansas, supercells would likely persist
    for a short period. Very-large hail is possible with any supercell,
    but will become less likely with time as storms will tend to congeal
    along the cold front in eastern Kansas. Given that the boundary
    layer will be rather well-mixed and the low-level jet will increase
    during the evening, some upscale growth into one or more clusters
    seems probable. Large to very-large hail will be the primary threat.
    Isolated severe/damaging gusts and perhaps a tornado or two are also
    possible. The primary area of greater tornado risk, conditional on
    supercell storm mode, will likely be from northeast Oklahoma into
    southeast Kansas where low-level hodographs will be more favorably curved/enlarged. There is some question how far east strong/severe
    storms will persist into Missouri. The current Slight risk has been
    maintained as is, but model trends will continue to be monitored.

    ...Central/western Oklahoma into Central Texas...
    In Oklahoma, capping from an elevated mixed layer should suppress
    convection along the dryline through the afternoon. With 850-700 mb
    winds generally veered in the vicinity of the dryline, it becomes
    rather uncertain if convection will be able to initiate given
    parcels short residence time in the narrow zone of ascent.
    Furthermore, mid-level ascent will not arrive until after sunset.
    Models continue to show a very weak signal for any development as a
    result. Should a storm or two manage to develop, the environment
    will be conditionally favorable for supercells capable of
    large/very-large hail, severe winds, and perhaps a tornado.

    Farther south into Texas, a similarly capped environment will exist.
    Stronger heating may lead to a few convection initiation attempts
    along the dryline (a scenario hinted at by the ECMWF/GFS as well as
    some CAMS). Additional potential will exist in far southern
    Oklahoma/North Texas near a triple point feature along with a
    strengthening low-level jet core. Isolated large to very-large hail
    and severe gusts would be the primary threats with this activity,
    should it develop.

    ...Lower Missouri into mid-Mississippi Valley...
    The lead shortwave will promote a surface low to deepen in the
    Kansas City vicinity and track roughly north-northeastward through
    the evening. A few, likely elevated, storms could produce large hail
    given the steep lapse rates aloft. An isolated strong/damaging gust
    is also possible but should be spatially limited and conditional on
    a more organized cluster developing. The northern and eastern extent
    of the threat are the most uncertain for these region.

    ..Wendt.. 03/28/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 29 06:17:34 2025
    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

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 29 17:30:42 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 291730
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 291728

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 PM 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.

    ...Synopsis...
    Mid-morning water vapor imagery depicts an upper-level shortwave
    trough across the Southwest that is the leading impulse within a
    longwave trough building across the eastern Pacific/western CONUS.
    This wave is expected to overspread the southern/central Plains
    today before migrating into the Great Lakes region through the day
    tomorrow. A secondary disturbance is expected to move into the
    southern Plains late tomorrow evening into early Monday. At the
    surface, the surface low analyzed across KS is forecast to intensify
    as it moves northeast along a frontal zone into the Great Lakes in
    tandem with the leading upper disturbance. The intensification of
    the low will result in a cold frontal surge across the Midwest/OH
    Valley tomorrow afternoon and across the Mid-MS Valley to Texarkana
    region tomorrow evening. Scattered to widespread thunderstorm
    development is anticipated along and ahead of the frontal zone with
    the potential for widespread large hail/severe winds and several
    tornadoes.

    ...Central TX...
    Latest guidance suggests convection may be ongoing across central TX along/ahead of a migratory dryline early Sunday morning. The
    southern extent of a pronounced EML casts doubt on storm
    coverage/longevity. However, buoyancy and deep-layer wind shear
    should be supportive of supercells with an attendant severe
    hail/wind threat if mature updrafts can develop along the boundary
    as the primary upper-level trough axis passes over the region.

    ...IL, IN, and OH...
    Consensus among recent forecast guidance is that kinematic fields
    will steadily strengthen across the Midwest and middle OH River
    Valley regions through the day as the surface low intensifies.
    Increasing southerly flow ahead of the primary cold front should
    allow for dewpoints in the upper 50s to low 60s to spread into the
    region by mid-afternoon. Scattered thunderstorm development along
    the cold front appears likely as early as 18-20z across IL, and
    while a few initially discrete cells are possible, strong forcing
    along the front should promote upscale growth into an organized line
    by late afternoon. Strong low-level flow (nearly 50 knots 0-1 km
    BWD) may promote bowing segments and embedded mesovorticies within
    the line - especially across northern IN/northwest OH. 30% wind
    probabilities have been expanded northward to account for this
    potential.

    While this is the most probable scenario based on morning guidance,
    it could be complicated by any ongoing showers/thunderstorms and/or
    remnant outflow boundaries associated with nocturnal convection over
    MO late Saturday/early Sunday morning. This could limit diurnal heating/destabilization or may provide pre-frontal foci for
    convective initiation and promote more discrete storm modes.

    ...Mid-MS Valley to Texarkana region...
    Scattered, initially discrete supercells are expected to develop
    from the confluence of the OH/MS rivers southwestward into the
    Texarkana region Sunday afternoon along the cold front and dryline.
    Strong flow associated with the intensifying cyclone will promote
    elongated hodographs featuring nearly uni-directional wind profiles
    and effective bulk shear values on the order of 50-60 knots. This
    will promote splitting supercells with the potential for large to
    very large (2+ inch) hail. A more appreciable supercellular tornado
    threat may emerge through early evening across the lower OH
    Valley/mid-MS Valley where stronger veering in the lowest 1-2 km is
    anticipated amid weak pre-frontal isentropic ascent between 925-850
    mb. While the tornado threat may be maximized through this corridor,
    low confidence in storm mode (due to the potential for splitting cells/destructive interactions) limits confidence in this potential
    to warrant higher probabilities at this time.

    However, upscale growth is anticipated through mid/late evening as
    the secondary upper disturbance migrates into the Texarkana region. Consolidation of multiple clusters into one or more organized linear
    segments is expected as storms push east towards the MS Valley with
    a gradual increase in the potential for damaging/severe winds.
    Additionally, low-level shear will remain favorable for embedded
    mesovorticies as the line pushes into western TN/northern
    MS/northwest AL through the overnight hours.

    ...Florida...
    A weak mid-level impulse (currently over the northern Gulf) is
    expected to meander across northern FL by peak heating. Somewhat
    strong mid-level winds (25-30 knots) associated with this feature
    may provide sufficient organization to thunderstorms developing
    across eastern central/northern FL to pose an isolated hail/wind
    threat.

    ..Moore.. 03/29/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 30 06:10:52 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 300609
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 300607

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0107 AM CDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Valid 311200Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM VIRGINIA SOUTHWESTWARD TO PARTS OF ALABAMA...GEORGIA AND THE FLORIDA
    PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong/severe thunderstorms -- with threat for fairly widespread
    damaging winds and tornadoes -- are forecast Monday from portions of
    the Northeast southwestward to the central Gulf Coast region.

    ...Parts of eastern/southern New York southward to the central and
    eastern Gulf Coast area...
    An upper trough will continue advancing steadily eastward across the
    eastern half of the U.S. Monday, reaching the Atlantic Coast states
    overnight. Accompanying this system, a cold front just west of the Appalachians at the start of the period is likewise expected to
    progress eastward with time, crossing the Appalachians during the
    day, and then the East Coast states before moving offshore
    overnight.

    Ahead of the advancing front, thunderstorms -- likely accompanied by
    ongoing severe risk -- are forecast to be crossing the central Gulf
    Coast region. Ahead of the ongoing convection, and the advancing
    front, moistening/destabilization is forecast to occur east of the
    mountains, with at least meager surface-based CAPE expected to
    evolve as far north as the southeastern New York vicinity. This
    will support development of thunderstorms near/ahead of the front as
    it advances eastward.

    Favorably strong flow aloft will spread across the region ahead of
    the upper system, supporting organized/severe storms. Northern
    portions of the risk area -- where CAPE should remain modest -- will
    likely experience locally damaging wind gusts as the primary severe
    risk. Farther south, greater instability will support stronger
    convection, including linear bands near the front with
    local/embedded rotation, as well as isolated supercells ahead of the
    boundary. As such, risk for damaging wind gusts will be accompanied
    by potential for hail, and tornadoes appear likely as well given
    ample low-level shear and a relatively moist boundary layer.

    Storms/severe risk should persist to the coast, eventually moving
    offshore overnight.

    ..Goss.. 03/30/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 30 17:33:44 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 301731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 301730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 PM CDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Valid 311200Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL GULF COAST...SOUTHEAST...AND CAROLINAS/VIRGINIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong/severe thunderstorms -- with a threat for scattered to
    widespread damaging winds and several tornadoes -- are forecast
    Monday from portions of the Northeast southwestward to the central
    Gulf Coast region.

    ...Synopsis...
    The primary synoptic features on Monday will be influenced by
    extensive antecedent and ongoing convection, but in general, one
    significant mid/upper-level shortwave trough will move from the
    lower Great Lakes toward the Canadian Maritimes, while a
    lower-amplitude midlevel shortwave trough will move from the Mid-South/Southeast toward the Carolinas/Mid Atlantic. A deep
    surface low will move across Quebec through the day, as a trailing
    cold front advances southeastward from the Northeast/New England
    into parts of the Southeast.

    ...Southeast into the Carolinas/Virginia...
    While uncertainty remains regarding antecedent convective evolution
    on D1/Sunday, latest guidance generally suggests that an organized
    storm cluster will ongoing Monday morning across parts of LA/MS/AL,
    potentially aided by the trailing shortwave trough moving out of the
    southern Plains. Favorable low-level moisture, moderate downstream
    buoyancy, and 30-50 kt in the 850-700 mb layer will help to maintain
    potential for an organized cluster to move eastward into parts of
    GA/SC through the day, accompanied by a threat for scattered to
    widespread damaging winds. Low-level shear/SRH will be sufficient to
    support some tornado threat as well, both with QLCS circulations and
    also with any embedded supercells. In addition to a tornado threat,
    any sustained supercells would also pose a threat of isolated hail.

    The anticipated storm cluster will tend to outpace the primary cold
    front, with some potential for at least isolated development in the
    wake of early-day convection. Uncertainty remains high regarding the
    severe potential with any second round of convection in this region.

    Farther north into parts of NC/VA, relatively strong heating of a
    moist environment will result in moderate buoyancy by early
    afternoon, though midlevel lapse rates will likely remain weak.
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop and spread eastward,
    with potential for a few organized cells/clusters capable of
    damaging wind. There will be some potential for an increase in
    low-level flow/shear and moisture later in the afternoon, which
    could increase the tornado threat, depending on the timing of storm
    initiation and maturation.

    ...Parts of the Mid Atlantic/Northeast...
    While instability will generally weaken with northward extent,
    scattered thunderstorm development is expected along/ahead of the
    front as far north as parts of NY and southern New England.
    Low/midlevel flow will remain somewhat enhanced along the southern
    periphery of the cyclone across Quebec, and some potential for
    damaging gusts and perhaps a tornado may accompany the strongest
    storms through the day and into the early evening, before the front
    moves offshore.

    ..Dean.. 03/30/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 31 06:00:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 310600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 310558

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1258 AM CDT Mon Mar 31 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible late Tuesday afternoon across the
    central and southern Plains, with the severe threat expected to
    spread eastward Tuesday night. Large to very large hail, severe
    gusts, and a few tornadoes are all possible.

    ...Central and Southern Plains into the Midwest...
    A somewhat complicated convective evolution is expected across parts
    of the central and Southern Plains late Tuesday. A powerful
    mid-level trough and accompanying 100+ kt jet streak are forecast to
    eject eastward over the central Rockies into the Plains late in the
    afternoon and into overnight Wednesday. Strong ascent will aid in
    the development and intensification of a deep lee low helping to
    rapidly draw substantial surface moisture northward late. Southerly
    winds will act on a sizable reservoir of rich moisture with mean W
    of 14-16 g/kg across south Texas and the western Gulf Basin. Higher
    surface dewpoints are forecast to rapidly return northward across
    much of the southern and central Plains. While model disagreement in
    regard to the speed of moisture return persists, an ensemble
    solution of guidance suggests upper 50s to low 60s F dewpoints are
    likely across the central Plains, with mid 60s F possible across the
    southern Plains by 00z.

    Cooling mid-level temperatures from the approaching trough will aid
    in destabilization ahead of a surging dryline, supporting initial
    convective development close to the low across pats of NE and
    northern KS. Steep mid-level lapse rates and elongated hodographs
    suggest the primary risk will be hail, some damaging winds are also
    possible given the relatively dry profile. Additional, likely
    elevated storms are expected later in the evening as low-level warm
    air advection increases and spreads into parts of the Midwest. Hail
    is the primary threat overnight.

    Farther south into KS, OK and western/central TX, a more conditional
    risk for supercell development is expected late afternoon to near
    sunset. Models vary greatly in the degree of mixing and heating near
    a sharpening dryline from south-central KS, into western OK, and
    central TX. Forecast soundings show some residual cloud cover and
    capping may remain east of the boundary through the late afternoon
    associated with the rapid return of moisture. However, some
    broad-scale ascent, strong isolation and solenoidal circulations may
    allow for isolated storm development initially within the more mixed
    air mass farther west. Should this occur, moderate buoyancy and
    strong deep-layer shear would support isolated supercells with a
    risk for large hail and damaging gusts.

    Should storms form, they will track east-northeast into the more
    sheltered air mass Tuesday evening. As moisture continues to
    improve, very strong low-level shear profiles are expected to
    develop with a 50-60 kt southerly low-level jet. All hazards,
    including a few tornadoes, significant hail and damaging gusts are
    possible given increasingly large hodographs (0-1km SRH of 300-500
    m2/s2) Tuesday night.

    Additional storm development will be possible along the cold front
    late Tuesday night which will spread eastward across the Plains and
    potentially approach the Ozarks overnight. Questions remain
    regarding the mode of overnight convection and whether it can remain surface-based, but a conditional risk of all severe hazards could
    persist to the end of the period.

    ..Lyons/Goss.. 03/31/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 31 06:17:39 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 310617
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 310615

    Day 2 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0115 AM CDT Mon Mar 31 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE MIDWEST...

    CORRECTED FOR TYPO

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible late Tuesday afternoon across the
    central and southern Plains, with the severe threat expected to
    spread eastward Tuesday night. Large to very large hail, severe
    gusts, and a few tornadoes are all possible.

    ...Central and Southern Plains into the Midwest...
    A somewhat complicated convective evolution is expected across parts
    of the central and Southern Plains late Tuesday. A powerful
    mid-level trough and accompanying 100+ kt jet streak are forecast to
    eject eastward over the central Rockies into the Plains late in the
    afternoon and into overnight Tuesday. Strong ascent will aid in the
    development and intensification of a deep lee low helping to rapidly
    draw substantial surface moisture northward late. Southerly winds
    will act on a sizable reservoir of rich moisture with mean W of
    14-16 g/kg across south Texas and the western Gulf Basin. Higher
    surface dewpoints are forecast to rapidly return northward across
    much of the southern and central Plains. While model disagreement in
    regard to the speed of moisture return persists, an ensemble
    solution of guidance suggests upper 50s to low 60s F dewpoints are
    likely across the central Plains, with mid 60s F possible across the
    southern Plains by 00z.

    Cooling mid-level temperatures from the approaching trough will aid
    in destabilization ahead of a surging dryline, supporting initial
    convective development close to the low across pats of NE and
    northern KS. Steep mid-level lapse rates and elongated hodographs
    suggest the primary risk will be hail, some damaging winds are also
    possible given the relatively dry profile. Additional, likely
    elevated storms are expected later in the evening as low-level warm
    air advection increases and spreads into parts of the Midwest. Hail
    is the primary threat overnight.

    Farther south into KS, OK and western/central TX, a more conditional
    risk for supercell development is expected late afternoon to near
    sunset. Models vary greatly in the degree of mixing and heating near
    a sharpening dryline from south-central KS, into western OK, and
    central TX. Forecast soundings show some residual cloud cover and
    capping may remain east of the boundary through the late afternoon
    associated with the rapid return of moisture. However, some
    broad-scale ascent, strong isolation and solenoidal circulations may
    allow for isolated storm development initially within the more mixed
    air mass farther west. Should this occur, moderate buoyancy and
    strong deep-layer shear would support isolated supercells with a
    risk for large hail and damaging gusts.

    Should storms form, they will track east-northeast into the more
    sheltered air mass Tuesday evening. As moisture continues to
    improve, very strong low-level shear profiles are expected to
    develop with a 50-60 kt southerly low-level jet. All hazards,
    including a few tornadoes, significant hail and damaging gusts are
    possible given increasingly large hodographs (0-1km SRH of 300-500
    m2/s2) Tuesday night.

    Additional storm development will be possible along the cold front
    late Tuesday night which will spread eastward across the Plains and
    potentially approach the Ozarks overnight. Questions remain
    regarding the mode of overnight convection and whether it can remain surface-based, but a conditional risk of all severe hazards could
    persist to the end of the period.

    ..Lyons/Goss.. 03/31/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 31 17:33:56 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 311732
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 311730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 PM CDT Mon Mar 31 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PARTS OF
    CENTRAL AND EASTERN KS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible late Tuesday afternoon into
    Tuesday night across the central and southern Plains. The greater
    coverage of storms is expected across parts of central and eastern
    Kansas, but significant severe storms will be possible farther south
    into Oklahoma and north Texas as well. All hazards are possible,
    including the potential for very large hail and a couple strong
    tornadoes.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid/upper-level trough is forecast to amplify across the
    western/central CONUS on Tuesday, as a powerful jet (80-100 kt at
    500 mb) begins to impinge on the central/southern Great Plains later
    in the period. In response to this trough and jet, a surface cyclone
    will intensify through the day across the central High Plains,
    before moving northeastward toward the lower MO Valley Tuesday
    night.

    Rich low-level moisture will initially be confined to central/south
    TX, but will stream rapidly northward through the day and evening in
    response to the deepening cyclone and a strong low-level jet. The
    magnitude and timing of richer moisture returns remain somewhat
    uncertain, and will be crucial for the potential of storm initiation
    along/east of the dryline through early evening.

    Initial high-based storms are expected to develop during the
    afternoon across parts of central NE, where low-level moisture will
    remain limited but stronger early-day ascent will spread across the
    region. Buoyancy will likely remain modest this far north, but
    increasing low-level and deep-layer flow/shear could support a
    threat of isolated strong/severe gusts and hail as this convection
    spreads east-northeastward into the early evening.

    Farther south, the environment along/east of the dryline into parts
    of western/central KS/OK and northwest TX will become increasingly
    favorable for organized severe storms, as upper 50s to mid 60s F
    dewpoints (greater with south extent) spread northward and
    deep-layer flow fields become rather intense. However, lingering
    CINH will tend to inhibit initiation through much of the afternoon,
    and the late arrival of richer boundary-layer moisture results in
    uncertainty regarding potential for storm development through early
    evening.

    Any supercells that can develop along/east of the dryline would pose
    an initial threat of large to very large hail and localized severe
    gusts. Warm-sector supercells that are able to persist into the
    evening will encounter increasing boundary-layer moisture and
    low-level shear/SRH and would pose an increasing tornado threat. The
    Slight Risk has been maintained across parts of OK/TX, but any
    increase in the signal for storm development along the dryline would necessitate one or more categorical upgrades across this area.

    There is greater confidence in storm coverage during the evening
    into late Tuesday night across parts of eastern KS and western MO.
    A strong (60+ kt) low-level jet will become focused into this
    region, as the surface low begins to move east-northeastward across
    KS. Convection may remain slightly elevated across this area, but
    moderate to locally strong buoyancy and favorable deep-layer shear
    will support a threat of large/very-large hail and severe gusts.
    Surface-based supercells could persist near the southern periphery
    of this cluster, with 0-1 km SRH of 300-500 m2/s2 supporting a
    tornado threat, including the conditional threat of a strong
    tornado. An Enhanced Risk has been added where confidence is
    greatest in storm coverage within an increasingly favorable
    environment.

    Overnight, additional storm development will be possible along the
    cold front into parts of OK/TX, within a very favorable conditional
    environment for organized storms. Given the timing and a tendency
    for deep-layer flow to become parallel to the front, questions
    remain regarding the mode of overnight storms and whether they will
    be surface-based, but some all-hazards severe threat could persist
    through the end of the forecast period.

    ..Dean.. 03/31/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 1 06:03:59 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 010602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 010600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Tue Apr 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE LOWER
    GREAT LAKES TO THE OH/MID MS VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Numerous severe storms are likely Wednesday and Wednesday night
    across the Lower Great Lakes, Mid Mississippi Valley, and the
    ArkLaTex. Severe wind gusts, very large hail, and strong tornadoes
    are possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad mid-level trough and powerful 100+ kt jet streak will move northeastward across the upper Midwest and Great Lakes regions
    Wednesday. Strong ascent from the advancing upper trough and primary
    shortwave impulse will support a deep surface low moving from the
    northern Plains into the western Great Lakes. A warm front will
    rapidly lift north through the morning and early afternoon across
    parts of eastern IA, MO, IL and IN. 60s F surface dewpoints appear
    likely to reach southern lower MI by the afternoon. A cold front
    attendant to the deep surface cyclone will sweep eastward, with
    widespread strong to severe storms expected to be ongoing
    along/ahead of the front at daybreak.

    ...Upper Midwest and Great Lakes...
    The presence of early morning storms and strong low-level warm
    advection substantially complicates the forecast convective
    evolution across the Great lakes and Midwest. Model guidance varies,
    but some solutions show these storms may re-intensify with the
    diurnal cycle posing a significant wind/tornado risk, given the very
    strong effective shear present. Other guidance suggests this initial
    activity could outrun the better buoyancy with eastward extent,
    potentially limiting the northward extent of return moisture and
    subsequent destabilization. Regardless, very strong synoptic ascent
    and low/deep-layer shear will support a threat of damaging winds and
    tornadoes if surface-based storms can be sustained into the Great
    Lakes and Midwest region during the afternoon and evening. Higher
    severe probabilities for damaging winds and possibly tornadoes may
    be needed in futures outlooks, as confidence in the warm frontal
    position and convective evolution are further resolved.

    ...Ozarks and the Mid MS Valley...
    Farther south, multiple embedded perturbations will overspread parts
    of the Midwest and mid MS and lower OH valleys as the trough and jet
    shift eastward Wednesday and Wednesday night. While displaced south
    of the primary ascent, moderate height falls will take place across
    the western half of a very broad warm sector. A few storms may be
    ongoing along the slow moving Pacific front/dryline across eastern
    OK and western AR/MO early. Re-intensification of this convection is
    possible by mid to late morning as the boundary-layer begins to warm
    and destabilize. Elongated hodographs, though with somewhat veered
    low-level flow, suggest a risk for large hail and a few tornadoes is
    likely. Some upscale growth is also possible with a mixed mode and
    numerous storm interactions along and near the front.

    Additional development appears likely along a per-frontal confluence
    axis, or within the broader warm sector across the western Mid MS
    Valley and lower OH valley by mid afternoon. Strong, but somewhat
    meridonal shear profiles may support a mixed mode of supercells and
    clusters as storms develop within a very favorable parameter space
    for significant severe weather (STP 3+). Hodographs will remain
    large through much of the afternoon and into the evening with ESRH
    of 300-400 m2/s2. This suggests any longer-lived supercells will
    pose a risk for strong tornadoes, in addition to very large hail and
    damaging winds.

    ...Red River and the ArkLaTex...
    Along the southern extent of the dryline/Pacific front, subtle
    height falls may support only isolated storm development. Still a
    couple storms appear likely by early to mid afternoon across parts
    of northeast TX, southern AR and northern LA. Strong mid-level flow,
    robust moisture (dewpoints near 70 F), and large hodographs will
    likely support supercells with all hazards. These storms should
    persist into parts of the mid and lower MS valley overnight with a
    continued severe risk.

    Later in the evening, a secondary low-level jet surge will begin
    across north TX and the Red River vicinity. Warm advection storms
    are likely to develop after 06z as the stalling cold front begins to
    lift back north into OK/TX as a warm front. Steep mid-level lapse
    rates and strong vertical shear will favor elevated
    supercells/clusters with an attended risk for large hail and
    isolated damaging gusts overnight.

    ..Lyons.. 04/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 1 17:34:51 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 011734
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 011733

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1233 PM CDT Tue Apr 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THE
    MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE LOWER OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Numerous severe storms are likely Wednesday and Wednesday night
    across the southern Great Lakes, Mid Mississippi Valley, and North
    Texas into the ArkLaTex. Severe wind gusts, very large hail, and
    strong tornadoes are possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad mid-level trough and powerful 100+ kt jet streak will
    accelerate northeastward from the central Plains to the Great Lakes
    on Wednesday. Strong ascent from the advancing upper trough and
    primary shortwave impulse will support a deep (~990mb) surface low
    moving from the northern Plains into the western Great Lakes. A warm
    front will rapidly move north through the morning which will allow
    for a broad warm sector featuring 60s F dewpoints to expand as far
    north as eastern Iowa to north-central Ohio/southern Michigan by
    Wednesday afternoon/evening. A cold front attendant to the deep
    surface cyclone will sweep eastward, with widespread strong to
    severe storms expected to be ongoing along/ahead of the front at
    daybreak.

    ...Mid Mississippi Valley to the Lower Ohio Valley...
    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing from northeast Texas to the
    Upper Midwest at the beginning of the period. East of this activity,
    a warm front will surge rapidly north across Illinois and Indiana
    with mid 60s dewpoints expected across the Mid-Mississippi Valley to
    the Lower Ohio Valley by mid-day. As temperatures warm into the
    upper 70s to low 80s, moderate to strong instability will develop by
    early afternoon. A cap, centered around 700mb, should keep deeper
    convection suppressed for much of the day. However, as height falls
    overspread the warm sector after 21Z and ascent increases in the
    right entrance region of the upper-level jet, this cap will erode. Simultaneously, even richer low-level theta-e, with upper 60s
    dewpoints and mean mixing ratio in excess of 14 g/kg will advect
    into the mid-Mississippi valley. This will provide an environment
    for explosive supercell development given 45-55 knots of effective
    shear. In addition, low-level shear will support the threat for
    tornadoes.

    A broad, strong low-level jet will be present across the warm sector
    for the entire day. However, there will be some relative weakening
    during the 18-22Z period. This may limit the tornado threat
    initially, but by 00Z, most guidance shows a renewed low-level jet strengthening and elongating of the hodographs. Therefore, the
    primary threat could be hail for a few hours during the evening
    before the tornado threat increases by 23Z-00Z and persists into the
    evening hours. Orientation of the storms and potential for training
    do provide some uncertainty, but in the moist environment, expect
    multiple mature supercells to persist into the evening when very
    strong low-level shear develops. Multiple strong to potentially
    intense tornadoes are possible during this period.

    ...North Texas to the ArkLaTex...
    Late Wednesday night (after 06Z Thu), initially elevated supercells
    will likely develop along and north of the front across northwest
    Texas. Hail will be the primary threat initially, but some damaging
    wind threat will also exist from these elevated storms. As they move
    east, and the front starts to move northward, these storms may
    eventually become surface-based early Thursday morning along the Red
    River from north-central Texas to the ArkLaTex.

    ...Upper Midwest to Upper Great Lakes...
    A conditional, potentially potent, severe weather threat could
    materialize across northern Illinois and into southern Michigan on
    Wednesday. This area, closer to the surface low and beneath the very
    strong mid-level jet streak, will have a wind profile favorable for
    all severe weather hazards. However, destabilization will depend
    heavily on the overnight convection Tuesday night from the central
    Plains into Missouri. If morning convection can clear, and
    especially if even broken clouds can permit some heating across some
    of the region, a greater tornado threat is possible across parts of
    northern Illinois.

    ..Bentley.. 04/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 2 06:03:15 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 020601
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 020600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Wed Apr 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE SOUTHERN
    PLAINS TO THE MID MS/OH VALLEYS...AND INTO THE MID ATLANTIC...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Several clusters of strong to severe storms are expected along a
    broad frontal zone from the Southern Plains, Mid Mississippi Valley
    to the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and the Mid Atlantic. Damaging gusts
    and hail are the primary risks, though a few tornadoes are possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    A stalled front will provide the main impetus for severe storm
    development from the ArkLaTex to the Mid Atlantic Thursday and
    Thursday night. Broad troughing over the central US will gradually
    amplify as strong flow aloft overspreads the frontal zone. Deep
    moisture and seasonably warm temperatures along and south of the
    elongated frontal zone will support the potential for strong to
    severe storms over a large area.

    ...ArkLaTex to the MS/TN Valleys...
    Elevated storms are likely to be ongoing near the stalled front
    early in the period across parts of the Red River and ArkLaTex
    vicinity. Flow aloft will turn more southerly, aiding in increasing
    low-level warm advection through the day despite relatively neutral
    mid-level height tendency. With surface dewpoints in the upper 60s
    to low 70s F, moderate buoyancy is likely with only partial diurnal
    heating. This should sustain the early storms, allowing them to
    spread east, and potentially become surface based over parts of the
    MS/TN Valleys. Effective shear of 55+ kt will favor a mix of
    supercells and bowing segments capable of damaging gusts and a few
    tornadoes.

    Additional storms are likely along the dryline over northeast TX and
    within the warm sector across parts of southern AR and northern LA
    by mid afternoon. Deep veering wind profiles suggests these storms
    will likely be supercellular, though the weak capping will favor
    multiple interactions and relatively quick upscale growth into one
    or more clusters with time. Until then, strong low/mid-level shear,
    steep mid-level lapse rates and strong instability will support a
    risk for all hazards.

    With multiple rounds of convection likely to pass through the area,
    confidence in the placement of the front is low. Some consideration
    was given to higher probabilities across parts of northeast TX,
    southern AR and northern LA, given the potential for several
    supercells or a well organized bowing segment.

    Another round of elevated storms is likely late Thursday into early
    Friday as the flow aloft becomes increasingly meridional over the
    southern Plains. Strong low-level warm advection and steep mid-level
    lapse rates will support a risk for large hail as storms overrun the
    stalled front across central and northwest TX, into southern OK
    overnight.

    ...OH Valley into the Mid Atlantic...
    Complications abound from overnight convection likely persisting
    into the daylight hours across the OH Valley. The front is forecast
    to continue to sag south and stall eventually across the OH Valley
    and Mid Atlantic by midday Thursday. South of the boundary low 60s F
    surface dewpoints and some filtered diurnal heating should support
    around 1000 J/kg of MLCAPE. Several embedded mid-level perturbations
    may provide enough ascent for additional convective development
    through the day. Vertical shear will remain strong as increasingly
    zonal winds aloft overspread the frontal zone. Several clusters of
    strong to severe storms are possible along the front with a risk
    primarily for damaging winds and tornado or two, given the
    relatively poor mid-level lapse rates and veered low-level flow.

    ..Lyons.. 04/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 2 17:32:50 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 021731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 021730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 PM CDT Wed Apr 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
    ARKLATEX TO WESTERN TENNESSEE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Several clusters of strong to severe storms are expected along a
    broad frontal zone from the Southern Plains, Mid Mississippi Valley
    to the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and the Mid Atlantic. Damaging gusts
    and hail are the primary risks. The greatest large hail and tornado
    threat (potentially strong) exists from the ArkLaTex to western
    Tennessee.

    ...Synopsis...
    An elongated frontal zone will provide a focus for a severe weather
    threat on Thursday from West Texas to the Mid-Atlantic. Ongoing
    convection of varying intensity will likely be ongoing with its
    outflow modulating the composite frontal location along this zone.
    As a mid-level trough amplifies across the southwestern CONUS,
    mid-level ridging will strengthen across the eastern CONUS with
    height rises across much of the warm sector. A low-level jet will
    intensify through the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley through the
    day and should provide enough synoptic ascent for scattered severe
    storms Thursday afternoon and evening from the ArkLatex to western
    Tennessee.

    ...West Texas to North Texas...
    Ongoing strong to severe storms are possible Thursday morning along
    and south of the Red River from Northwest Texas to north-central
    Texas. MUCAPE in excess of 2000 J/kg and very strong effective shear
    (80+ knots) will support the potential for supercells capable of
    large hail and some severe wind gusts. This threat will wane by mid
    day as the low-level jet veers and weakens across North Texas and
    southern Oklahoma.

    Late Thursday night and into Friday morning, the low-level jet is
    expected to strengthen across central Texas as the larger-scale
    mid-level trough starts to advance eastward with a lead impulse
    likely to move across West Texas between 06Z and 12Z. RAP forecast
    soundings show very steep mid-level lapse rates and MUCAPE in excess
    of 2500 J/kg across portions of northwest and West Texas as the
    synoptic scale forcing strengthens. Therefore, several supercells
    capable of large to very large hail and severe wind gusts are
    expected between 06Z and 12Z across portions of West Texas and
    Northwest Texas.

    ...ArkLatex to Western Tennessee...
    An outflow boundary from Day 1/Wednesday convection will likely be
    located somewhere near the LA/AR border at 12Z Thursday. This
    boundary will start to mix north into southern Arkansas and
    northeast Texas as a warm front through the day. A strengthening
    low-level jet, particularly after 18Z, should provide ample forcing
    for supercell development in the vicinity of this warm front during
    the afternoon/evening hours. Strong to potentially extreme
    instability is anticipated south of this boundary amid a rich
    theta-e airmass. Any of these supercells will have the potential for
    large to potentially very large hail. Any supercells which can
    remain along or south of the warm front will pose a threat for all
    severe hazards including the potential for strong tornadoes.
    However, this threat is conditional on surface-based supercell
    residence time. Farther northeast into western Tennessee, northward
    recovery of the warm front remains more uncertain as the cold
    pool/convection from day 1 may persist through the morning. However,
    if the warm front can mix north into western Tennessee, higher
    tornado probabilities could be needed at a later time.

    ...Kentucky to the Mid-Atlantic...
    Day 1 convection and cloud cover will significantly inhibit severe
    weather potential on Day 2 along the frontal zone from Kentucky to
    the Mid-Atlantic. Trimmed probabilities farther south near the Ohio
    River based on latest forecast front location. Otherwise, a moist
    airmass will remain in place along and south of the front/remnant
    outflow. Therefore, only minimal heating will be needed for some
    storms to develop which could be supercellular given 45 to 55 knots
    of effective shear along the frontal zone. Overall height rises
    should keep stronger storm coverage isolated to potentially
    scattered. Some damaging wind/large hail, and perhaps a tornado
    threat may exist within this corridor on Thursday, but the exact
    locations of this threat remains uncertain at this time.

    ..Bentley.. 04/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 3 06:00:11 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 030600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 030558

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1258 AM CDT Thu Apr 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHEAST
    TEXAS ACROSS MUCH OF ARKANSAS AND INTO FAR SOUTHERN MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Several clusters of strong to severe storms are possible from
    central Texas across the ArkLaTex and into the lower Ohio Valley
    Friday and Friday night. The greatest threat for tornadoes, large
    hail and damaging winds will be from the ArkLaTex across much of
    Arkansas into far southern Missouri, including strong tornado
    potential.

    ...Synopsis...
    On Friday, a broad fetch of south/southwest winds aloft will extend
    from the southern Plains into the Midwest, as an upper low moves
    across AZ/NM. A surface boundary will extend roughly from the OH
    Valley into central TX early on Friday, with a wave of low pressure
    developing during the day over northeast TX/southeast OK. This
    feature will then translate northeastward along the front into IN/OH
    late. As this occurs, a rather rapid warm frontal surge will occur
    over AR and into far southern MO, aided by persistent southerly
    deep-layer winds from surface to 850 mb. This will also result in a
    rapid increase in instability, and shear favorable for supercells
    with tornado potential.

    Behind the low, a cold front will push across the remainder of
    northern TX and into south-central TX. Although post frontal,
    elevated instability will persist, with the influence of the upper
    trough to the west resulting in overnight hail potential into
    central TX.

    ...From Texas into Arkansas and toward the lower Ohio Valley...
    Scattered showers and storms are likely near the front from the Red
    River into northern AR/southern MO early in the day. Sufficient
    instability and lapse rates, along with strong deep-layer shear will
    favor hail potential.

    During the day, areas of heating will occur over the warm sector,
    which will remain very moist. Afternoon supercells are anticipated
    over northeast TX/southeast OK into western AR, with a continuation
    across northern AR/southern MO through evening. This area will
    experience substantial pressure falls with a favorable corridor for
    a strong tornado threat. Depicted model hodographs indicate
    effective SRH over 400 m2/s2 will be common. Given continued
    northward motion of the warm front across southeast MO into the OH
    Valley late, storms should be able to persist/ride along with the
    front with access to unstable air mass.

    Overnight, cool temperatures aloft with the upper trough and a surge
    of elevated theta-e from the southeast and atop the surface cold
    front should favor widespread storms with large hail expected into
    central TX.

    ..Jewell.. 04/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 3 17:33:01 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 031732
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 031730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 PM CDT Thu Apr 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THE ARKLATEX
    INTO WESTERN ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Several clusters of strong to severe storms are possible from
    central Texas across the ArkLaTex and into the lower Ohio Valley
    Friday and Friday night. The greatest threat for tornadoes, large
    hail and damaging winds will be from the ArkLaTex across western
    Arkansas, including potential for strong to potentially intense
    tornadoes.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough, centered across the Southwest and northern New
    Mexico, will start to shift east on Friday. As this occurs a broad,
    strong low-level jet will develop across eastern Texas and into
    Louisiana, Arkansas, and Mississippi. This strengthening lower
    tropospheric flow will aid in the northward advancement of a warm
    front, located from central Texas to the Mid-Mississippi Valley at
    the beginning of the period, to eastern Oklahoma an near the MO/AR
    border by 00Z Sat. This reorientation of the frontal boundary should
    be favorable for supercells with the potential for large hail (some
    2+ inch), damaging wind gusts, and tornadoes (some potentially
    EF3+).

    ...ArkLatex to Western Arkansas...
    As a warm front lifts north across Arkansas through the day, a very
    unstable environment (2500-4000 J/kg MLCAPE) will develop from the
    ArkLaTex into western Arkansas as temperatures warm into the mid 80s
    with dewpoints in the low 70s. Some weak convection may maintain
    along the frontal zone in eastern Oklahoma during the morning and
    early afternoon. However, more robust convective development is not
    anticipated until mid-afternoon when height falls start to
    overspread the region, and the influence of the entrance region of
    the upper-level jet increases ascent. In addition, most high
    resolution guidance indicates a local area of low pressure may
    traverse the frontal zone to near northwest Arkansas by 21Z. The
    combination of these factors, which have decent agreement among 12Z
    guidance, points toward multiple supercells along the frontal zone
    during the mid to late afternoon and into the evening. These
    supercells, in an environment featuring 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE and
    0-1km SRH ~400 m2/s2, will support the potential for strong to
    intense tornadoes. Messy storm mode could limit the longevity of any
    of these supercells/tornadoes, but even with limited duration, the
    environment supports a tornado threat.

    A more conditional long-track tornado threat, which would also bring
    greater opportunity for EF3+ tornadoes, exists east of the frontal
    boundary. Synoptic forcing ahead of the boundary is relatively weak,
    but very strong instability (3000-4000 J/kg MLCAPE) is forecast with
    minimal inhibition across the warm sector. Therefore, more discrete,
    open warm-sector supercell development is possible, but will be more
    dependent on mesoscale details which will become more clear in the
    Day 1 timeframe.

    ...Missouri into the Ohio Valley...
    Storm mode and destabilization will be a lot more unclear farther
    northeast along the frontal zone from southern Missouri and into
    western Ohio. Multiple rounds of ongoing storms and new development
    are anticipated through the period in a strongly sheared
    environment, but storm motion will likely keep the majority of
    storms on the cool side of the boundary. Any storms which can stay
    along or south of the boundary will pose some severe weather threat
    with all hazards possible, particularly farther southwest, closer to
    the richer low-level moisture. However, hail, and perhaps some wind
    gusts will be possible with any storms in this region.

    ...West Texas to Central Texas...
    Strong elevated instability (2500-3000 J/kg MUCAPE) is forecast
    across central Texas and into portions of west Texas Friday night
    and into early Saturday morning. This instability, combined with
    very strong shear (70-80 knots per NAM forecast soundings), will
    support elevated supercells capable of large hail (perhaps 2+")
    early Saturday morning as the low-level jet reintensifies and
    orients into central Texas ahead of the approaching mid-level
    trough.

    ..Bentley.. 04/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 4 06:00:46 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 040600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 040559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Fri Apr 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SABINE VALLEY AND LOWER TO MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms, capable of producing damaging wind gusts, large hail
    and several tornadoes are expected from Saturday into Saturday night
    from the Sabine River Valley northeastward into the lower to mid
    Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Strong tornadoes, very large hail, and
    severe gusts above 70 mph will be possible in parts of the lower to
    mid Mississippi Valley.

    ...Sabine Valley/Lower to Mid Mississippi Valley...
    A mid-level trough and an associated jet streak will move eastward
    across the southern Plains on Saturday. During the morning, a large
    MCS will be located along a cold front from the Ark-La-Tex
    northeastward into the mid Mississippi Valley. Ahead of the MCS, a
    very moist airmass will be in place with surface dewpoints in the
    upper 60s and lower 70s F. Moderate instability is expected early in
    the day across this moist airmass. Due to the instability already in
    place, thunderstorms along the front will likely develop a severe
    threat Saturday morning. Severe wind gusts and isolated large hail
    are expected to be the initial threats.

    The storms will gradually move eastward into a 50 to 60 knot
    low-level jet, located from central Louisiana northeastward into
    eastern Arkansas. This jet, along with around 50 knots of 0-6 km
    shear, will create favorable deep-layer and low-level shear for
    supercells and tornadoes. Forecast soundings near the axis of the
    low-level jet from late morning into the afternoon on Saturday have
    0-3 Km storm-relative helicity of 250 and 350 m2/s2. This will
    support a tornado threat, associated with supercells and bowing line
    segments. The more intense supercells could produce strong
    tornadoes, with the greatest threat located from central Louisiana
    to southeast Arkansas. The storms could also produce hailstones
    greater than 2 inches in diameter.

    As the entire MCS moves eastward across the lower to mid Mississippi
    Valley during the morning and afternoon, widespread damaging-wind
    gusts will become likely along a line that is expected to become
    increasingly organized during the day. The more intense components
    of the line could produce damaging wind gusts above 70 mph. The
    severe threat with this line is expected to continue from late
    afternoon into the early to mid evening as it moves into the central
    Gulf Coast states.

    ...Ohio Valley...
    A mid-level trough will move eastward across the Upper Midwest on
    Saturday, as a cold front advances southeastward into the Ohio
    Valley. Thunderstorms are expected to be ongoing along the front at
    the start of the period, with storms moving gradually eastward into
    the Ohio Valley during the day. Ahead of the storms, an axis of
    instability is forecast to develop by midday from western Kentucky
    into southeast Indiana and southern Ohio. In addition to the
    instability, low-to-mid level flow is forecast to increase across
    the Ohio Valley during the day, as heights fall associated with the
    approach of the mid-level trough. Forecast soundings near the
    instability axis in western and central Kentucky around midday on
    Saturday have MLCAPE peaking in the 500 to 750 J/kg range, and have
    0-6 km shear around 50 knots. The environment should support
    embedded supercells and bowing line segments. The primary threats
    are expected to be damaging-wind gusts and hail, but an isolated
    tornado threat will also be possible.

    ..Broyles.. 04/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 4 06:15:37 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 040614
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 040612

    Day 2 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0112 AM CDT Fri Apr 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE LOWER TO MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    CORRECTED FOR SW TX THUNDER LINE

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms, capable of producing damaging wind gusts, large hail
    and several tornadoes are expected from Saturday into Saturday night
    from the Sabine River Valley northeastward into the lower to mid
    Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Strong tornadoes, very large hail, and
    severe gusts above 70 mph will be possible in parts of the lower to
    mid Mississippi Valley.

    ...Sabine Valley/Lower to Mid Mississippi Valley...
    A mid-level trough and an associated jet streak will move eastward
    across the southern Plains on Saturday. During the morning, a large
    MCS will be located along a cold front from the Ark-La-Tex
    northeastward into the mid Mississippi Valley. Ahead of the MCS, a
    very moist airmass will be in place with surface dewpoints in the
    upper 60s and lower 70s F. Moderate instability is expected early in
    the day across this moist airmass. Due to the instability already in
    place, thunderstorms along the front will likely develop a severe
    threat Saturday morning. Severe wind gusts and isolated large hail
    are expected to be the initial threats.

    The storms will gradually move eastward into a 50 to 60 knot
    low-level jet, located from central Louisiana northeastward into
    eastern Arkansas. This jet, along with around 50 knots of 0-6 km
    shear, will create favorable deep-layer and low-level shear for
    supercells and tornadoes. Forecast soundings near the axis of the
    low-level jet from late morning into the afternoon on Saturday have
    0-3 Km storm-relative helicity of 250 and 350 m2/s2. This will
    support a tornado threat, associated with supercells and bowing line
    segments. The more intense supercells could produce strong
    tornadoes, with the greatest threat located from central Louisiana
    to southeast Arkansas. The storms could also produce hailstones
    greater than 2 inches in diameter.

    As the entire MCS moves eastward across the lower to mid Mississippi
    Valley during the morning and afternoon, widespread damaging-wind
    gusts will become likely along a line that is expected to become
    increasingly organized during the day. The more intense components
    of the line could produce damaging wind gusts above 70 mph. The
    severe threat with this line is expected to continue from late
    afternoon into the early to mid evening as it moves into the central
    Gulf Coast states.

    ...Ohio Valley...
    A mid-level trough will move eastward across the Upper Midwest on
    Saturday, as a cold front advances southeastward into the Ohio
    Valley. Thunderstorms are expected to be ongoing along the front at
    the start of the period, with storms moving gradually eastward into
    the Ohio Valley during the day. Ahead of the storms, an axis of
    instability is forecast to develop by midday from western Kentucky
    into southeast Indiana and southern Ohio. In addition to the
    instability, low-to-mid level flow is forecast to increase across
    the Ohio Valley during the day, as heights fall associated with the
    approach of the mid-level trough. Forecast soundings near the
    instability axis in western and central Kentucky around midday on
    Saturday have MLCAPE peaking in the 500 to 750 J/kg range, and have
    0-6 km shear around 50 knots. The environment should support
    embedded supercells and bowing line segments. The primary threats
    are expected to be damaging-wind gusts and hail, but an isolated
    tornado threat will also be possible.

    ..Broyles.. 04/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 4 17:15:33 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 041715
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 041713

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1213 PM CDT Fri Apr 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EAST TEXAS
    TO MIDDLE TENNESSEE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms, capable of producing damaging wind gusts, large hail
    and several tornadoes are expected from Saturday into Saturday night
    from the Sabine River Valley northeastward into the lower to mid
    Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Strong tornadoes, very large hail, and
    severe gusts above 70 mph will be possible in parts of the lower to
    mid Mississippi Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level jet streak, situated near the southern axis of the
    mid-level trough across northern New Mexico will shift northeastward
    through the day and will be centered over Arkansas by 12Z Sunday. An
    elongated surface frontal zone will run parallel to this deep-layer
    flow from South Texas to the Mid-Mississippi Valley. A weak surface
    low is forecast to develop along this frontal zone and move
    northeast through the day Saturday. Large hail, severe wind gusts,
    and tornadoes are possible along and southeast of this surface front
    during the day Saturday and into Saturday night.

    ...East Texas into Middle Tennessee...
    Widespread convection is anticipated Saturday morning along the
    frontal zone from northeast Texas into the Ohio Valley. This
    convection should reinforce the cold air north of the front which
    may result in it continuing to move south through the day. This is a complicating factor to the overall forecast which could limit the
    longevity of surface based storms and thus the overall severe
    weather threat closer to the front from southern Arkansas into
    western Tennessee and northern Mississippi. The HRRR and other CAM
    guidance develops a strong enough surface wave along the front from
    mid-morning to early afternoon which stalls and/or results in a
    slight northward shift of the frontal zone by early afternoon. This
    would result in longer residence time for any surface based storms
    and at least some window for a strong tornado threat. However,
    guidance has trended weaker with the surface wave over the last
    several runs with slightly slower ejection of the mid-level jet max.
    Therefore, am not confident that the front will stall/lift north,
    with a preferred solution similar to the NAM which shows a continual
    southeast movement of the frontal zone through the day Saturday.

    Farther southwest, frontal orientation across east Texas should be
    more supportive for surface-based supercells along and perhaps east
    of the front. Therefore, have expanded 10% tornado probabilities
    farther southwest to address this threat. A line of storms with
    embedded supercells will continue southeast through the evening and
    into the overnight hours across Louisiana and eventually into
    Mississippi. The greatest significant tornado threat will likely be
    associated with any storms which can remain more discrete, ahead of
    the primary frontal development.

    ...Ohio Valley into parts of the central Appalachians...
    The severe weather threat from western Kentucky to southern
    Pennsylvania and western Maryland remains very conditional on
    overnight/morning convection from the Day 1 period. 12Z guidance
    varies greatly in the expansiveness of these thunderstorms tonight
    with stratiform rain and a stable airmass depicted by the HRRR with
    the NAM indicating minimal thunderstorm activity from northern
    Kentucky and southern Ohio eastward which will permit some
    instability and given the shear, potential for some severe weather
    threat Saturday afternoon. A slight/marginal risk seems appropriate
    to handle this conditional threat with some modifications likely
    once Day 1 convective evolution becomes more apparent.

    ..Bentley.. 04/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 5 05:53:34 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 050553
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 050551

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CDT Sat Apr 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST AND SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A wind-damage and isolated tornado threat will be possible on Sunday
    across parts of the Southeast. Marginally severe wind gusts will
    also be possible in parts of the southern Appalachians.

    ...Southeast/Southern Appalachians...
    Southwest mid-level flow is forecast across the Southeast on Sunday.
    A mid-level jet streak will move northeastward into the Ohio Valley,
    as a cold front advances eastward across the Gulf Coast states and
    southern Appalachians. A large MCS is expected to be ongoing near
    the front at the start of the period. The MCS is forecast to move
    slowly eastward during the day into a moist and unstable airmass.
    Ahead of the front, surface dewpoints will be in the mid to upper
    60s F over much of the Southeast, and from the mid 50s to lower 60s
    F in the southern Appalachians. The unstable airmass ahead of the
    front is expected to gradually become more stable during the day,
    due to abundant cloud cover and convective outflow. In spite of
    this, the southern edge of the mid-level jet streak will create
    strong deep-layer shear, sufficient for an isolated severe threat

    Forecast soundings near the instability axis in eastern Alabama
    during the afternoon show moderate deep-layer shear, which will
    support storm organization. Ahead of the front, model forecasts have
    a 40 to 55 knot low-level jet persisting through much of the morning
    and afternoon. Near the low-level jet, forecast hodographs are
    curved with 0-3 km storm-relative helicity in the 250 to 350 m2/s2
    range. For this reason, an isolated tornado threat will be possible
    with supercells. However, the primary storm mode is expected to
    remain linear. Line segments that can organize into bowing segments
    will have a wind-damage threat. The severe threat may persist into
    early evening, but should become more isolated as instability
    weakens across the region.

    Further to the north into parts of the southern Appalachians, strong
    deep-layer shear associated with the edge of a mid-level jet streak
    will support some storm organization. However, instability is
    forecast to be very weak, suggesting that any wind-damage threat
    will be marginal.

    ..Broyles.. 04/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 5 17:05:02 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 051704
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 051703

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1203 PM CDT Sat Apr 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS CENTERED OVER
    ALABAMA AND INTO PARTS OF ADJACENT STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A wind-damage and isolated tornado threat is possible on Sunday
    across parts of the Southeast. Marginally severe wind gusts will
    also be possible in parts of the southern Appalachians.

    ...Synopsis...
    On Sunday, a positive-tilt trough will move slowly east out of the
    southern Plains and across the lower to mid MS Valley, with
    gradually increasing southwesterlies aloft across the Gulf Coast
    states. A weak surface low will move out of MS and across northern
    AL during the day, then northeastward across the western Carolinas
    overnight. A rain-reinforced front will extend south from the low,
    from northern AL into eastern MS and LA, with another boundary
    extending from TN into VA. A very moist air mass will exist across
    the warm sector, with moderate shear supporting scattered severe
    storms.

    ...Eastern MS and LA...AL...
    A line of thunderstorms will be ongoing along the cold front early
    on Sunday where MUCAPE will be on the order of 1000-1500 J/kg.
    Severe potential will be mitigated somewhat due to the relatively
    warm profiles aloft, however, veering winds with height and around
    50 kt at 850 mb may support embedded supercells within the line,
    with both wind and brief tornado potential. Depending on the degree
    of outflow/convective contamination early in the day, a slightly
    better corridor of tornado threat could materialize.

    ..Jewell.. 04/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 6 06:01:07 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 060601
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 060559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Sun Apr 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
    NORTHERN FLORIDA INTO THE SOUTHERN ATLANTIC SEABOARD...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A severe threat is expected to develop on Monday across parts of
    northern Florida and the southern Atlantic Seaboard.

    ...Northern Florida/Southern Atlantic Seaboard...
    A mid-level trough will move eastward across the lower to mid
    Mississippi Valley on Monday, with southwest flow located over
    eastern parts of the Southeast. At the surface, a cold front will
    advance eastward toward the southern Atlantic Seaboard. An MCS will
    likely be ongoing near the front early in the day from the western
    Florida Panhandle northeastward into western Georgia. Ahead of the
    MCS, a very moist airmass is forecast with surface dewpoints in the
    upper 60s and lower 70s F. Warming surface temperatures across this
    moist airmass will increase instability, with MLCAPE likely reaching
    1000 to 1200 J/kg by midday. This will help to maintain convective
    development within the MCS.

    In addition, a mid-level jet will move northeastward across the
    Southeast on Monday. The right entrance region of this feature will
    overspread the moist sector. In response, model forecasts suggest
    that a rather focused 40 to 50 knot low-level jet will develop
    across northern Florida and southern Georgia from late morning into
    the early afternoon. Near this low-level jet, 0-3 km storm-relative
    helicity is forecast to increase into the 200 to 300 m2/s2 range.
    This, combined with strong deep-layer shear, should support an
    isolated tornado threat with any supercell that can develop.
    Supercells and organized bowing structures may also produce isolated
    severe wind gusts. The severe threat is expected to decrease by
    early evening, as instability weakens across the moist airmass, and
    as the stronger flow shifts northeastward into the western Atlantic.

    ..Broyles.. 04/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 6 17:15:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 061715
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 061714

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1214 PM CDT Sun Apr 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHERN
    FLORIDA INTO MUCH OF SOUTHERN GEORGIA AND SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered storms, some severe, are possible Monday afternoon across
    parts of northern Florida and the southern Atlantic Seaboard.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A positive-tilt upper trough will sweep across the Southeast on
    Monday, with midlevel jet max intensifying as it begins to phase
    with a deeper trough over the Great Lakes. At the surface, a
    pre-frontal trough will develop over the central Carolinas extending
    south into GA, with mid 60s F dewpoints maintained.

    In concert with the strengthening midlevel wave, a 40-50 kt
    low-level jet is forecast as well, with effective SRH over 200
    m2/s2. Heating will steepen lapse rates and result in MUCAPE to
    around 1000 J/kg ahead of the cold front, which will extend from the
    western Carolinas into central GA at midday.

    Scattered showers and storms are likely to be ongoing along the cold
    front early, with rejuvenation potential as the activity and lift
    encounter the warming air mass to the east.

    The primary mitigating issue will be very poor lapse rates aloft,
    which will limit updraft strength. Still, favorable diurnal timing
    and favorable shear should result in a at least isolated severe
    storms with mainly wind potential. A brief tornado cannot be ruled
    out with the strongest storms during the afternoon.

    ..Jewell.. 04/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 7 05:52:09 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 070551
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 070549

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1249 AM CDT Mon Apr 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
    FAR SOUTHERN FLORIDA AND THE KEYS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe storms may occur over far southern Florida
    and the Keys on Tuesday afternoon into the overnight hours.

    ...Synopsis...
    A low-latitude midlevel trough will advance eastward across the Gulf
    during the day, and overspread the Florida Peninsula during the
    overnight hours. At the same time, a cold front will move
    southeastward across southern Florida through the afternoon. Farther
    west, a low-amplitude midlevel trough will track eastward across the
    northern Rockies and adjacent High Plains.

    ...Southern Florida and the Keys...
    Along/ahead of the southward-moving cold front, a moist/uncapped air
    mass will promote showers and thunderstorms across central/southern
    Florida throughout the day. However, poor midlevel lapse rates/weak
    instability and modest deep-layer shear should limit storm
    intensity. By late afternoon into the overnight hours, effective
    shear will increase to around 30 kt ahead of the midlevel trough,
    which may promote a couple strong/severe storm clusters capable of
    locally damaging gusts across far southeast Florida and the Keys.
    However, deep west-southwesterly flow and a developing frontal wave
    over the Gulf Stream should tend to focus the stronger storms
    offshore.

    ...Northern High Plains...
    Ahead of the low-amplitude midlevel trough, low/mid-level lapse
    rates will steepen through the afternoon, while effective shear
    increases to around 30 kt. Weak instability limits confidence in the
    severe threat, though locally strong wind gusts could accompany
    convection as it spreads eastward amid the steep lapse rates through
    the afternoon.

    ..Weinman.. 04/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 7 17:39:02 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 071738
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 071736

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1236 PM CDT Mon Apr 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong storms may occur over far southern Florida and the
    Keys late Tuesday and into the overnight hours, and from southeast
    Montana to Black Hills.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A low-latitude shortwave trough will move east across the Gulf while
    a front sinks south across far southern FL. Modest heating may yield
    MUCAPE around 1000 J/kg over far southern FL, supporting daytime
    storms near and north of the front. Midlevel temperatures/lapse
    rates do not appear particularly favorable for hail. Ahead of the
    upper wave, 850 mb flow will average 20-25 kt, with most of the
    stronger winds above 500 mb. As such, severe gusts from
    boundary-layer mixing appear unlikely. Small/non-severe hail or
    locally strong gusts will be possible.

    Overnight, as the upper trough and leading midlevel speed max
    approach the FL Peninsula, a minimal increase in lift may result in
    increased storm coverage near the Keys and from the FL Straits into
    the Bahamas.

    Elsewhere, afternoon and evening thunderstorms are likely from
    southeast MT/northeast WY into western SD late. Here, very steep
    lapse rates and a progressive/low-amplitude wave will favor storms
    forming near the Billings vicinity with scattered cells producing small/sub-severe hail and locally gusty winds.

    ..Jewell.. 04/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 8 05:22:08 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 080521
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 080519

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1219 AM CDT Tue Apr 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are possible across portions of the the Middle
    Mississippi Valley and northern High Plains, though severe storms
    are not expected.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A midlevel trough will amplify as it advances southeastward from the
    northern Plains into the Midwest, while a related surface low and southwestward-extending cold front overspread the Mid MS/OH Valleys.
    Despite limited boundary-layer moisture, steep midlevel lapse rates
    will yield sufficient instability (albeit weak) for isolated
    thunderstorms along the front during the evening/overnight hours.
    While locally strong gusts cannot be ruled out, the weak instability
    should limit storm intensity.

    Farther west, ascent in the left-exit region of a
    southeastward-moving upper-level jet, combined with steep deep-layer
    lapse rates/marginal instability, will support isolated
    thunderstorms across the northern and central Plains.

    ..Weinman.. 04/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 8 17:14:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 081714
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 081712

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1212 PM CDT Tue Apr 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms are possible across portions of the Midwest, the Upper
    Midwest, and the northern High Plains, though severe storms are not
    expected.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A midlevel trough will amplify as it advances southeastward from the
    northern Plains into the Midwest on Wednesday, while a surface low
    will develop over Missouri and moves into the Lower Ohio Valley. A
    cold front will extend southwestward from this surface low with a
    warm front to the northeast.

    Despite limited boundary-layer moisture, steep midlevel lapse rates
    will yield sufficient instability (albeit weak) for isolated
    thunderstorms along the warm front during the evening/overnight
    hours. Some thunderstorms may develop along the cold front where
    slightly greater instability is forecast. Locally strong gusts
    cannot be ruled out, but the weak instability should limit storm
    intensity.

    Isolated thunderstorms are expected across the northern Plains and
    Upper Midwest as a mid-level trough amplifies and moves south and a
    mid-level jet streak overspreads the region.

    ..Bentley.. 04/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 9 06:00:56 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 090600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 090559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Wed Apr 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE MID/DEEP SOUTH AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms capable of producing large hail and damaging
    gusts will be possible across portions of the Mid/Deep South and
    Tennessee Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    A positively tiled large-scale trough will advance southeastward
    from the Upper MS Valley/Midwest to the OH/TN Valleys through the
    period. Within the base of the trough, a 70-80-kt west-northwesterly
    midlevel jet will overspread the Mid/Deep South and TN Valley. In
    response, lower/middle 50s F dewpoints will stream northeastward
    along/ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front.

    ...Mid/Deep South and Tennessee Valley...
    Along/ahead of the front, ample diurnal heating of the partially
    modified Gulf moisture beneath steep midlevel lapse rates (upwards
    of 8 C/km) will contribute to around 1000 J/kg MLCAPE. As ascent in
    the left-exit region of the midlevel jet impinges on the
    destabilizing air mass along/ahead of the front, a band of scattered thunderstorms will develop across the Mid-South during the
    afternoon. 50-60 kt of effective shear (characterized by a
    long/straight hodograph) oriented perpendicular to the front will
    favor discrete/semi-discrete supercells initially. The primary
    concern with these storms will be large hail to around 1.5-1.75
    inches.

    As storms track/develop southeastward amid steep boundary-layer
    lapse rates, strengthening/expanding cold pools and a more
    boundary-parallel component of the midlevel flow will promote
    upscale growth into clusters and eventually a broken line into the
    evening hours. As a result, damaging wind gusts will become an
    increasing concern, before low-level static stability increases
    (owing to nocturnal cooling) with southeastward extent.

    ..Weinman.. 04/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 9 17:12:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 091712
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 091710

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1210 PM CDT Wed Apr 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO NORTHERN GEORGIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe storms capable of producing large hail and damaging
    gusts will be possible across portions of the Mid/Deep South and
    Tennessee Valley on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    On Thursday, an elongated, strong mid-level jet streak across the
    central Plains will help amplify the trough across the eastern
    CONUS. Very cold mid-level temperatures (-25 to -26C at 500mb) will
    overspread the Mid-Mississippi Valley into the Tennessee Valley. At
    the surface, lower/middle 50s F dewpoints will stream northeastward
    along/ahead of a southeastward-moving cold front.

    ...Mid/Deep South and Tennessee Valley...
    Ahead of a southward moving surface front, low-level moistening and
    substantial diurnal heating will result in moderate instability
    (1000 to 1500 J/kg MLCAPE) from Arkansas into Tennessee, with weaker destabilization farther northeast into the Lower Ohio River Valley.
    A broad region of ascent will develop across the warm sector by
    early Thursday afternoon within the left exit region of the
    upper-level jet streak. This should result in scattered
    thunderstorms from Arkansas/Missouri to Indiana, eastern Kentucky
    and perhaps southern Ohio. The best overlap between the greatest
    instability and shear will be from eastern Arkansas eastward to
    northern Georgia where the slight risk is present.

    Long/straight hodographs will initially support splitting supercells
    with a threat for large hail. In addition, these supercells will
    have some wind threat given the steep lapse rates and well-mixed
    boundary layer. This thermodynamic profile will support eventual
    upscale growth into one or more line segments with a primary
    damaging wind threat expected by late afternoon and into the
    evening.

    ..Bentley.. 04/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 10 05:36:02 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 100535
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 100534

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1234 AM CDT Thu Apr 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe hail and damaging winds are possible across parts of
    the Southeast from late morning through the afternoon Friday.

    ...Eastern NC vicinity...
    A leading shortwave impulse rotating through the basal portion of a
    broader eastern U.S. longwave trough will yield strengthening
    forcing for ascent during the late morning. Some 00Z HREF members,
    notably the NSSL and FV3 indicate thunderstorm development
    increasing early in the day within the low-level warm conveyor ahead
    of a deepening but weak surface cyclone. Should this occur, it would
    be ill-timed with respect to peak boundary-layer heating and
    displaced east of the moderate mid-level lapse rate plume. But it
    would be coincident with modifying moisture return characterized by
    mid to upper 50s dew points over eastern NC.

    Other guidance indicates a separate round of afternoon storm
    development confined to near the surface cyclone in the eastern
    Piedmont of NC, while a pronounced mid-level dry slot limits storm
    development with southward extent into SC/GA. The degree of surface
    heating along the northwest extent of the weak buoyancy plume is
    quite uncertain. But mid-level lapse rates approaching 7 C/km and
    moderate deep-layer shear may yield isolated severe hail and locally
    strong gusts within afternoon storms.

    ...North FL...
    Greater boundary-layer heating is anticipated ahead of the trailing
    portion of the cold front that extends into the northeast Gulf.
    Consensus of guidance suggests this heating will aid in isolated to
    scattered thunderstorms during the afternoon, south of the mid-level
    dry slot. While low-level flow will be veered and weak ahead of the
    front, pronounced deep-layer speed shear is expected amid a 60-70 kt
    500-mb jet. This should favor mid-level rotation in a few cells with
    a threat of isolated large hail and localized damaging winds. This
    activity should shift off the Atlantic Coast or weaken over land by
    early evening.

    ..Grams.. 04/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 10 17:09:10 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 101708
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 101707

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1207 PM CDT Thu Apr 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    EASTERN CAROLINAS INTO FAR SOUTHEAST VIRGINIA AND FOR NORTHERN
    FLORIDA AND FAR SOUTHEAST GEORGIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to locally severe thunderstorms are possible from
    the eastern Carolinas into southeast Virginia and across far
    southeast Georgia and northern Florida.

    ...Eastern Carolinas into Southeast Virginia...
    A line of showers with embedded thunderstorms is approaching the
    southern Appalachians by mid-day Thursday along a low-mid-level
    front which will continue east through the day. Some intensification
    of these thunderstorms (or additional convective development along
    the mountains) is expected today which will impact the Friday/Day 2
    forecast. As the remnants of this front/mountain convection interact
    with better low-level moisture across eastern North Carolina later
    tonight, some intensification of these storms are anticipated. While
    these storms likely will remain sub-severe without any surface
    heating and thus minimal instability, the intensification should
    assist in the remnant outflow boundary/front moving offshore during
    the morning hours on Friday. This will have a stabilizing effect
    which results in a conditional severe threat on Day 2/Friday.

    Some guidance shows a strengthening surface low which results in
    substantial return flow across the eastern Carolinas, which will
    result in low 60s dewpoints and weak to moderate instability by
    later morning to early afternoon. However, if this stronger
    cyclogenesis does not occur (as forecast by several hi-res models
    this morning), the instability and severe weather threat will remain
    mostly offshore. No modifications were made to the marginal risk,
    but a 2% tornado probability was added for parts of eastern North
    Carolina. If stronger southerly/southeasterly flow and low 60s
    dewpoints can develop ahead of a strengthening surface low, a
    tornado is possible.

    Overall, a few strong to isolated severe storms are possible with a
    primary threat of large hail. However, this threat is conditional on destabilization, which remains questionable at this time.

    ...Southeast Georgia and northern Florida...
    Strong heating is anticipated along a frontal zone from southeast
    Georgia to northern Florida Friday afternoon. Forecast soundings
    show 500 to 750 J/kg MLCAPE with a well-mixed boundary layer
    extending to near 3km. Overall lack of moisture should limit
    instability and storm intensity, but 35 to 45 knots of shear will
    support some storm organization. Therefore, the strongest storms
    could exhibit some updraft rotation with an increased large
    hail/severe wind threat, but overall expect the threat to remain
    isolated.

    ..Bentley.. 04/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 11 05:39:28 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 110539
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 110537

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1237 AM CDT Fri Apr 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF
    NORTHEAST WY/SOUTHEAST MT/WESTERN SD...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe gusts to 65 mph are possible from the Big Horns to
    the Black Hills during the late afternoon to mid-evening Saturday.

    ...Big Horns to the Black Hills...
    A shortwave trough over WA/southern BC at 12Z Saturday will progress
    across the northern Rockies and MT. Mid-level height falls will
    overspread the northern High Plains during peak diurnal heating.
    Despite only scant buoyancy, the strengthening large-scale ascent
    will support scattered thunderstorms by late afternoon. With a belt
    of strong mid-level west-southwesterlies, a couple low-topped,
    high-based supercells are possible. Deeply mixed thermodynamic
    profiles to the east-southeast of the Big Horns should foster a
    threat for strong to localized 50-55 kt gusts before convection
    wanes after sunset.

    ...Mid-MO Valley to the Upper Midwest...
    As the low-level jet strengthens across the southern to central
    Great Plains Saturday night, sufficient ascent may support isolated thunderstorms overnight. But with poor-quality moisture return
    relative to the stout EML, it is uncertain if/where convection will
    be sustained. Uninhibited parcels may be rather elevated and with
    the expectation of weak buoyancy at most, severe hail potential
    appears limited.

    ..Grams.. 04/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 11 17:13:19 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 111713
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 111711

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1211 PM CDT Fri Apr 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS NORTHERN WYOMING
    AND SOUTHEAST MONTANA TO THE BLACK HILLS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe gusts are possible from the Big Horns to the Black
    Hills during the late afternoon to mid-evening Saturday.

    ...Southeast Montana/northeast Wyoming to the Black Hills...
    A mid-level shortwave trough across the Pacific Northwest/southern
    British Columbia will advance east through the day Saturday. Height
    falls across northern Wyoming and southeast Montana will lead to
    strengthening ascent by late afternoon. Strong heating, featuring
    temperatures in the low 70s, will support sufficient instability for
    scattered thunderstorm activity. The deeply-mixed thermodynamic
    profile will support the potential for some severe wind gusts from
    this activity. This threat should quickly wane after sunset as the
    boundary layer cools.

    ...Mid-MO Valley to the Upper Midwest...
    A synoptically strong and nocturnally enhanced low-level jet will
    strengthen Saturday night across the central Plains. This will
    result in strengthening isentropic ascent in addition to height
    falls ahead of the approaching mid-level trough. Despite favorable
    synoptic scale lift, most forecast soundings show limited moisture
    and a lack of elevated instability. Some guidance has higher quality
    moisture and develops isolated thunderstorms, but even if storms
    develop, instability will likely be too weak to support more than
    small hail.

    ..Bentley.. 04/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 12 05:24:13 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 120524
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 120522

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1222 AM CDT Sat Apr 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Sunday or Sunday night.

    ...Upper MS Valley to the Great Lakes...
    Isolated, elevated thunderstorms are expected to be the predominant
    convective scenario on Sunday. An amplifying shortwave trough will
    move east across northern portions of the Great Plains and Upper
    Midwest. This will yield deepening of a surface cyclone from the
    central Plains to Lake Superior. Despite this amplification, poor
    quality boundary-layer moisture return relative to a stout EML
    appears likely to inhibit surface-based storm development through
    the period. Thin, uncapped buoyancy will probably be relegated to
    parcels around 700 mb. This will expand east during the day from the
    Upper Midwest into the Great Lakes. Small hail is possible, mainly
    across the Upper MS Valley, where fast flow will exist in the
    cloud-bearing layer.

    ...CO to MO...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible in CO by late afternoon Sunday
    within a post-frontal environment characterized by limited low-level
    moisture and meager buoyancy. Very isolated thunderstorms may
    develop Sunday night into Monday morning with eastward extent across
    KS to MO. Scant elevated buoyancy may develop as 700-mb
    frontogenesis strengthens within a highly diffluent upper-level flow
    regime, atop an increasingly post-frontal stable surface.

    ..Grams.. 04/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 12 17:02:54 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 121702
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 121700

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1200 PM CDT Sat Apr 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A deep upper trough will depart the East Coast Saturday night, with
    a surface high settling over the Southeast on Sunday. To the west, a
    shortwave trough will move east out of MT and toward the upper MS
    Valley by Monday morning. A cold front in association with this
    trough will quickly push across the northern and central Plains,
    with a pre-frontal trough roughly from MN into MO and southwestward
    into OK.

    Given the southeastern surface high, moisture return will be limited
    ahead of the Plains feature. However, cooling aloft and steepening
    of lapse rates, as well as lift will allow for elevated instability
    to develop into the upper MS Valley and Great Lakes, supporting
    isolated to scattered thunderstorms overnight. Weak instability
    should preclude any severe threat.

    ..Jewell.. 04/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 13 05:46:36 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 130545
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 130543

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1243 AM CDT Sun Apr 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE UPPER OH
    VALLEY AND CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple tornadoes along with scattered damaging winds and large
    hail are possible from mid-afternoon to mid-evening across parts of
    the Upper Ohio Valley and central Appalachians.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough will further amplify over the Upper Great Lakes
    towards the ON/QC border, supporting gradual deepening of a surface
    cyclone from 995 to 990 mb. In its wake, a separate shortwave
    impulse and intense mid-level jetlet will dive southeast across the
    northern Great Plains towards the Lower OH Valley. A surface cold
    front will arc south across the Lower Great Lakes and then
    southwestward through the Mid-South by late afternoon Monday.

    ...OH Valley to the Mid-Atlantic States...
    While guidance has largely been consistent with synoptic-scale
    pattern over the past several days, large spread exists in the
    degree of boundary-layer heating on Monday afternoon ahead of the
    surface cold front. For example, the 00Z NSSL-ARW and HRW-FV3 are
    10-15 F colder with warm-moist sector surface temps compared to the
    00Z HRRR and HRW-ARW. These latter models simulate multiple
    long-track supercells. This heating discrepancy, along with low
    confidence in the aggressive low-level moistening indicated by most
    guidance beneath an expansive EML, mitigates a categorical upgrade
    this cycle. But all three hazards have been highlighted with level
    2-SLGT risk probabilities.

    Overall expectation is for a ribbon of mid to upper 50s surface dew
    points to advect as far northeast as the Upper OH Valley. If robust boundary-layer heating indeed occurs, this would support MLCAPE near
    1000 J/kg. The initial presence of the EML may delay storm
    development along the front until mid afternoon. But guidance
    consensus suggests at least scattered thunderstorms should form in
    the Central to Upper OH Valley vicinity as mid-level height falls
    increase atop the modestly convergent surface front. The approach of
    an intense mid-level jet will support fast-moving convection, along
    with effective bulk shear above 60 kts. Despite veered surface
    winds, low-level hodograph curvature should be moderately enlarged.

    A few supercells seem plausible in this setup, a couple of which may
    become long-tracked. These appear most probable across the southeast
    OH to northern WV vicinity, where tornado potential should be
    maximized during the early evening. Otherwise, a mix of large hail
    and damaging wind swaths are expected. East of the higher terrain in MD/northern VA, remnant steep low-level lapse rates may support
    isolated damaging gusts and marginal hail, before convection
    wanes/becomes increasingly elevated Monday night.

    ..Grams.. 04/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 13 17:09:50 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 131709
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 131708

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1208 PM CDT Sun Apr 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EASTERN
    KENTUCKY AND OHIO INTO THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe storms are possible Monday from
    mid-afternoon to mid-evening across parts of the Upper Ohio Valley
    and central Appalachians.

    ...Ohio Valley into the Mid Atlantic...
    An upper low will deepen from Lake Superior into eastern Ontario on
    Monday, with an amplifying upper trough from the northern Plains
    into the OH Valley late.

    At the surface, a cold front will extend south from the Ontario low,
    affecting OH and KY prior to 00Z. A narrow zone of mid to upper 50s
    F dewpoints will spread northeastward ahead of the front, with
    pockets of heating. This will lead to 1000-1500 J/kg MUCAPE from KY
    into WV, with lower values northward across OH and into western PA.

    Gradual height falls along with increasing midlevel moisture will
    overspread the diurnally prepared boundary layer over KY, southern
    OH and WV, with scattered strong to severe storms developing by late
    afternoon.

    Strong deep-layer shear will favor cellular activity, with a couple
    supercells possible. Despite the primarily veered/westerly flow, any
    rightward propagation off the hodograph will result in favorable
    SRH, possibly supporting a brief tornado. Otherwise, hail is
    expected with the stronger cores, with localized wind damage.

    ..Jewell.. 04/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 14 05:29:21 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 140529
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 140527

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1227 AM CDT Mon Apr 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Tuesday or Tuesday night.

    ...Northeast...
    Sporadic, low-topped thunderstorms may develop towards midday
    through the afternoon within a post-frontal regime as 500-mb
    temperatures fall at/below -28 C. This should occur to the west of
    an intense mid-level jet that will progress quickly across the
    Mid-Atlantic States and off the coast by evening. While the boundary
    layer will be drying, scant buoyancy may persist where mid-level
    lapse rates abruptly steepen. Much of the convection will probably
    remain as scattered showers, with thunderstorm coverage expected to
    be very isolated. Locally strong gusts could accompany this weak
    convection at peak heating across southern New England.

    ...Southwest...
    A low-amplitude shortwave impulse should dampen as it moves from the
    Lower CO Valley towards the southern Rockies. But adequate
    large-scale ascent coupled with scant buoyancy should yield isolated thunderstorms, mainly on Tuesday afternoon. Farther west, a separate
    shortwave trough will approach but remain offshore of the CA coast.
    Greater but still weak buoyancy from the Sierra NV Mountains across
    northern CA may support isolated afternoon thunderstorms. Weak
    deep-layer shear/ascent will minimize severe potential.

    ..Grams.. 04/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 14 17:05:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 141705
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 141704

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1204 PM CDT Mon Apr 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are not expected on Tuesday or Tuesday night.

    ...Northeast...
    A post-frontal regime will be in place across the Northeast Tuesday.
    Flow aloft will remain modest with mid-level cooling through the
    day. This will support potential for redevelopment of scattered
    thunderstorm activity by the afternoon. Given post-frontal drying
    conditions and weak buoyancy, this should yield primarily sub-severe
    low-topped convection, though occasional gusty winds will be
    possible.

    ...Southwest...
    A mid-level low will approach the West Coast, with a belt of
    mid-level flow overspreading southern California into southern
    Nevada. Ahead of this feature, a weak shortwave trough will move
    across the Lower Colorado Valley towards the southern Rockies.
    Enough mid-level moisture in place with large-scale ascent will
    allow for isolated to scattered thunderstorm activity across the
    northern Sierra and across the Four Corners region. As shear
    profiles will be weak, storms are not expected to be severe.

    ..Thornton/Leitman.. 04/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 15 05:39:29 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 150539
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 150537

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1237 AM CDT Tue Apr 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN A PORTION OF
    THE CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms, with a primary threat of large hail,
    are possible on Wednesday evening/night across parts of the central
    Great Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A northern-stream shortwave trough is expected to dig southward from
    the Canadian Rockies into the northern Intermountain West. A
    southern-stream, lower-amplitude shortwave trough will drift towards
    the southern CA coast. A pair of lee cyclones will develop near the
    Black Hills and the CO/KS border area by Wednesday evening.

    ...Central Great Plains...
    Just-in-time modified moisture return from south TX is anticipated
    by early evening, yielding potential for isolated high-based
    thunderstorm development near the southwest KS/far northwest OK
    border area. This portion of the dryline, to the east-southeast of
    the aforementioned cyclone, will have the best chance of sustaining
    deep convection with overlap of the low-level thermal ridge/weak
    buoyancy. Substantial veering of the wind profile with height could
    support a high-based supercell or two with severe hail/wind.

    The 00Z HRW-FV3 is a distinct outlier in indicating potential for a
    discrete supercell deeper into the evening across south-central KS,
    that impinges on greater low-level moisture amid enlarged low-level
    hodograph curvature. Bulk of guidance otherwise suggests a
    substantial increase in MLCIN after sunset as the low-level jet
    intensifies from west TX into KS, with convection probably
    struggling given the sub-optimal moisture relative to the stout EML.

    Elevated convection should form later Wednesday night into early
    morning Thursday, along the leading edge of the 700-mb warm front
    and towards the exit region of the low-level jet. Although this
    convection may remain rooted near 700 mb, favorable speed shear
    through the cloud-bearing layer should offer a risk of isolated
    severe hail overnight towards the Lower MO Valley.

    ..Grams.. 04/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 15 17:25:03 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 151724
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 151723

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1223 PM CDT Tue Apr 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PORTIONS OF THE
    CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms, with a primary threat of large hail,
    are possible on Wednesday evening/night across parts of the central
    Great Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A progressive open wave trough will shift southward from Canada
    before phasing with an upper-level low off the west coast of
    California on Wednesday. The subtropical jet will spread eastward
    across the central Plains, with several embedded shortwave
    disturbances rippling through the flow. Westerly flow across the central/southern Rockies will promote lee cyclogenesis late in the
    period, with an increase in a southerly low-level jet across the southern/central Plains.

    ...Central Great Plains...
    Southerly return flow will bring an increase of moisture into the
    central Plains, with potential for isolated to scattered
    thunderstorm development. A limiting factor remains increasing CIN
    and low-level stability beneath a strong EML. Regardless, agreement
    has increased on convective initiation occurring near the dryline
    across portions of central/southern Kansas late in the period. Given
    the elevated nature of this convection, the greatest risk will be
    for large hail. This will continue into the lower MO Valley through
    the end of the period Thursday morning.

    Earlier in the period, some potential exists for development further
    south near the OK/KS border toward the end of peak heating in the
    early evening. A few hi-res solutions have hinted at development of
    a supercell or two within this region, apparent in UH tracks from
    the 12z HREF. Conditionally, an established supercell in this region
    could support very large hail, given steep lapse rates aloft and
    ample shear/CAPE.

    ...Elsewhere...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are expected from
    northern/central California into the Great Basin and northern
    Rockies through the period. These are expected to be sub-severe
    given weak shear profiles.

    ..Thornton/Leitman.. 04/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 16 05:46:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 160546
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 160545

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1245 AM CDT Wed Apr 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE
    CORN BELT STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible, mainly from
    late afternoon Thursday into the evening, across parts of the Corn
    Belt States. Large to very large hail, a couple tornadoes, and
    localized damaging winds may occur.

    ...Synopsis...
    A longwave trough, consisting of multiple embedded shortwave
    impulses, will drift east from the southern Prairie Provinces to the
    Lower CO Valley. A lee surface cyclone will be anchored over the
    central High Plains. Minor, triple-point surface waves are expected
    along the baroclinic zone in far northeast KS and southern MN on
    Thursday afternoon.

    ...Corn Belt States...
    Along the leading edge of a stout EML and 700-mb warm front,
    isolated to scattered elevated convection should be ongoing at 12Z
    Thursday across parts of the lower MO Valley. This activity may pose
    a threat for isolated severe hail before weakening towards midday.

    Neutral mid-level height change is anticipated in its wake along the aforementioned baroclinic zone. Low-level warm theta-e advection and convergence along the front will be primary drivers of convective
    potential from late afternoon into Thursday night. Guidance spread
    is quite large for a D2 forecast with the thermodynamic setup ahead
    of the front, especially across IA to the northeast of the
    triple-point dryline intersection in northeast KS. The 00Z NAM is
    around 20 F cooler with surface temps at peak heating relative to
    the bulk of guidance that have very warm and well-mixed boundary
    layers. This has substantial impact on the spatial extent and
    amplitude of MLCAPE/MLCIN ahead of the front. It seems probable that
    mid to upper 50s surface dew points will spread as far north as
    southern MN. With a lean towards the more well-mixed guidance, this
    should support a corridor of moderate buoyancy with MLCAPE from
    1500-2500 J/kg.

    The most probable signal for late-afternoon storm development is
    along the baroclinic zone from southeast NE into southern MN,
    coincident with supercell wind profiles. Weak low-level winds
    initially in the southeast NE region could support a long-track
    supercell capable of producing a very large hail swath. Otherwise,
    severe to sporadic significant severe hail seems plausible with late
    afternoon to early evening storms, along with localized severe gusts
    and a low-confidence tornado threat.

    Coverage of elevated storms may remain subdued on Thursday night.
    Despite a strong low-level jet across OK/KS to the Mid-MS Valley, restrengthening of the EML may inhibit sustained storms.
    Conditionally, the environment will support elevated supercells with
    a primary threat of large hail.

    ..Grams.. 04/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 16 17:23:20 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 161723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 161721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1221 PM CDT Wed Apr 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE EASTERN CENTRAL PLAINS AND UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible, mainly from
    late afternoon Thursday into the evening, across parts of the
    eastern Central Plains to the Upper Midwest. Large to very large
    hail and localized damaging winds are the primary risks.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad open wave trough will extend from the western Canada into
    the Northern Rockies and Great Basin on Thursday, with broad
    southwesterly flow extending from the Southwest through the
    central/northern Plains. A surface cyclone is expected to develop
    across western Kansas, with a diffuse frontal boundary extending
    southwest to northeast across the Central Plains into the Midwest.
    The triple point near the low/dryline/front interface is expected to
    be the focus point for convective development by the afternoon and
    evening from eastern Nebraska to Iowa and into Minnesota.

    ...Eastern Central Plains into the Upper Midwest...
    As the low develops across western Kansas late Wednesday into
    Thursday, southerly return flow will bring moisture northward into
    the central Plains. Afternoon thunderstorm development is expected
    as differential heating is maximized along a frontal boundary across
    eastern Nebraska Thursday afternoon. This region will be
    characterized by dew points in the 50s to 60s, with MLCAPE around
    1500-2500 J/kg by the afternoon amid a plume of steep low to
    mid-level lapse rates. While MLCIN is expected to increase across
    portions of Iowa, a corridor of open warm sector is expected to
    develop across eastern Nebraska where wind profiles will support
    supercells. These supercells may be initially surface based, capable
    of large hail (some very large 2"+), damaging wind, and perhaps a
    tornado. Boundary parallel flow will likely lead to some
    undercutting of storms as well as storm motions that favor training
    cells, which will likely limit the tornado threat into the evening
    while potential for large hail and damaging wind continues with
    eastward extent.

    A few surface based cells may develop as far north as southwestern
    Minnesota. Moisture profiles are less favorable this far northward
    but convergence along the front/surface trough along with favorable
    wind profiles will support some risk for large hail, damaging wind,
    and perhaps a tornado.

    ..Thornton/Jewell.. 04/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 17 05:52:55 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 170552
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 170551

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CDT Thu Apr 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM LOWER
    MICHIGAN TO THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from the parts of the
    Great Lakes to the southern Great Plains, mainly during the late
    afternoon Friday into Friday night. Large hail and isolated severe
    gusts will be the main hazards with this activity.

    ...Synopsis...

    A positive-tilt large-scale upper trough will pivot south and east
    across portions of the north-central to western U.S. on Friday. A
    swath of 60-80 kt 500 mb flow will stretch from the southern Rockies
    to the Great Lakes ahead of the upper trough. At the surface, low
    pressure will develop northeast from the KS/MO/IA vicinity Friday
    morning, to southern Ontario/Quebec by early Saturday. As this
    occurs, a cold front will develop southeast across portions of the
    Mid-MS Valley/Great Lakes and southern Plains. A weak secondary
    surface low likely will develop across west TX, where a dryline will
    extend southward from the eastern Panhandle to the Big Bend region.


    Southerly low-level flow will transport modest boundary-layer
    moisture northward ahead of these surface features and beneath fast
    mid/upper southwesterly flow. This will support scattered severe
    storms late Friday afternoon into the overnight hours from portions
    of the southern Plains to the Great Lakes.

    ...Lower-MO/Mid-MS Valley to Great Lakes...

    Elevated thunderstorms north of a warm front will likely be ongoing
    during the morning into the afternoon across WI/northern MI. This
    activity may pose a risk for marginally severe hail.

    Meanwhile, a shortwave upper trough embedded within the northern
    branch of the larger-scale western U.S. upper trough will shift east
    across the northern Plains and Upper Midwest during the
    evening/overnight. This will facilitate the eastward progression of
    the surface front through the period, creating a focus for
    thunderstorm development. However, strong capping will limit
    development along the front, likely until closer to 00z, when
    stronger large-scale ascent overspreads the surface boundary and
    cooling aloft ensues. Thunderstorms will likely remain elevated atop
    the strong EML in the 850-700 mb layer, and will likely become
    undercut by the surface cold front given boundary-parallel flow
    through the cloud-bearing layer. Nevertheless, steep midlevel lapse
    rates and sufficient MUCAPE will support organized convection
    capable of producing large hail. With time, cells may become
    training clusters, posing some isolated risk for damaging gusts.

    ...Southern Plains Vicinity...

    As a surface low develops across west TX, a triple point will emerge
    near the eastern TX Panhandle/South Plains vicinity. A stout EML
    will preclude convective development for much of the day. Near the
    triple point and northeast along the advancing cold front, isolated
    to scattered thunderstorms should form in the 22-00z time frame.
    Supercell wind profiles with large MUCAPE, very steep lapse rates,
    and elongated hodographs suggests initial supercells will pose a
    risk for large to very large hail through early evening. Thereafter, boundary-parallel flow will result in clustering/training as
    convection also becomes undercut by the front. Damaging gusts also
    may occur with initial supercells given a well-mixed boundary
    layer/steep low-level lapse rates beneath the EML. Additionally,
    some strong gust potential could occur into the Ozarks vicinity as
    clustering ensues, but hail is expected to be the main concern.

    ..Leitman.. 04/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 17 17:32:06 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 171731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 171730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 PM CDT Thu Apr 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF THE
    SOUTHERN PLAINS NORTHEASTWARD TOWARD THE UPPER GREAT LAKES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from parts of the
    southern Plains northeastward toward the upper Great Lakes from late
    Friday afternoon into early Saturday morning. Large hail and
    isolated severe gusts will be the main hazards.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad belt of strong southwest winds aloft will stretch from Baja
    CA to the Great Lakes, with an upper trough extending from Manitoba
    into the Great Basin. Meanwhile, upper ridging will occur over the
    eastern states, with a high over the Gulf Of America.

    At the surface, a large area of high pressure will exist over the
    east, with southeast flow around the high bringing moisture off the
    Gulf and into southern Plains and Midwest. This moistening will
    occur ahead of a cold front, stretching roughly from southern WI
    into central MO and OK at 00Z. This front will gradually progress
    south and east, and will be the primary focus for scattered severe
    storms on Friday.

    ...Lower MO Valley into OK and TX...
    Strong surface heating will occur over TX and into western OK Friday
    afternoon, as mid 60s F dewpoints surge northward toward the
    approaching cold front. This front will be near I-40 at 00Z, with
    clusters of severe storms likely developing in the heated air from
    western OK into northwest TX. MLCAPE over 2500 J/kg is possible, and
    wind profiles south of the cold front will favor supercells. Initial development may produce a couple tornadoes prior to the cold front
    undercutting the storms as they progress east/northeastward across
    OK. Very large hail will be possible on both side of the front as
    hodographs will be elongated and primarily front-parallel.

    Farther northeast into KS and MO, additional lift via warm advection
    late in the day and into the evening will also support clusters of
    severe storms, possibly elevated but also with hail and localized
    wind potential.

    ...Upper Great Lakes southward into the mid MO Valley...
    Strong warm advection will result in elevated thunderstorms by
    midday over parts of WI and into northern/Upper MI, with sufficient
    instability to support an elevated marginal hail risk. Farther
    south, late afternoon development is likely along the front from
    southern WI to the IA/IL border area and into MO, aided by daytime
    heating. Though capped, lift along the boundary should instigate
    scattered cells near 00Z, with isolated supercells tracking across
    IL, IN, and perhaps southern MI and northwest OH. Winds just off the
    surface will be quite strong at over 50 kt, aiding wind gusts. A
    brief tornado cannot be ruled out across this region, and scattered
    hail is likely as well.

    ..Jewell.. 04/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 18 05:42:41 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 180542
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180540

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1240 AM CDT Fri Apr 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM WEST-CENTRAL
    TEXAS INTO SOUTHERN MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are possible from central
    Texas into the Ohio Valley on Saturday.

    ...Synopsis...

    A northern stream upper shortwave trough will shift east across
    Ontario/Quebec and the Great Lakes to the Northeast on Saturday.
    Meanwhile, a cold front will shift southeast across the Ohio Valley
    through afternoon. Further south, a southern stream upper trough
    over the Southwest will become negatively tilted as it spreads
    eastward over the southern Plains by Sunday morning. The southwest
    extent of the Ohio Valley cold front will stall over TX/OK and into
    the Ozarks for much of the day as warm advection maintains a moist
    warm sector ahead of the boundary prior to stronger height falls
    overspreading the region near/after 00z.

    ...OK/TX into the Ohio Valley - Saturday morning/afternoon...

    Fast southwesterly deep-layer flow parallel to the surface boundary
    will result in a substantial area of ongoing rain and thunderstorms
    Saturday morning from eastern OK into the Ozarks and northeast along
    the surface front through the Ohio Valley. While instability will
    remain limited, strong deep layer flow and cool temperatures aloft
    could support sporadic strong gusts and marginally severe hail
    diurnally.

    ...TX/OK into the Ozarks - Saturday late afternoon/evening...

    Convection is likely to redevelop late Saturday afternoon along the
    cold front in persistent low-level warm advection and as a low-level
    jet increases toward evening. Supercell wind profiles are evident in
    forecast soundings, with cool temperatures aloft supporting a
    corridor of moderate MLCAPE (1000-2000 J/kg) from west-central TX
    and north TX into southeast OK/western AR. Initial supercells could
    pose a risk for large hail and a tornado or two. Convection may
    become undercut by the southeast-advancing cold front with time into
    the evening hours, with some upscale growth into training clusters
    of line segments. While inhibition will increase into the nighttime
    hours, some risk for isolated damaging gusts could accompany any
    linear development as well.

    ..Leitman.. 04/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 18 17:46:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 181746
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 181745

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1245 PM CDT Fri Apr 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER MUCH OF
    CENTRAL TEXAS NORTHEASTWARD INTO SOUTHERN MISSOURI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are possible mainly from
    Texas into southern Missouri on Saturday. Isolated strong storms may
    occur during the day across the Ohio Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper trough will fill slightly as it moves from AZ/NM into the
    southern Plains. Ahead of this feature a broad belt of strong
    southwest flow aloft will extend from the southern Plains into the
    Northeast, where a deepening upper low will develop into Quebec.
    Meanwhile, an upper ridge will remain situated over the Southeast.

    At the surface, a boundary will stretch from the northeastern states southwestward across the OH Valley and into northwest TX. The New
    England portion of this boundary will push east as a cold front
    during the day, with scattered convection in a weak instability but
    strong mean wind environment.

    The OH Valley portion of the front will be stationary, but a narrow
    band of instability will exist along it. Glancing warm advection
    with west/southwest winds and heating may yield a few thunderstorms,
    but sounding show relatively weak instability or overall severe
    potential.

    ...TX into southern MO and into the OH Valley...
    Early day storms are likely to exist from eastern OK into MO and
    extending north of the OH River, in a zone of low-level theta-e
    advection. Marginal hail cannot be ruled out over southern parts of
    this regime where elevated instability will be stronger, but overall
    it appears widespread rain may reduce severe potential at that time.

    To the south, stronger instability will exist from OK into TX, with
    a destabilizing warm sector south of the quasi-stationary front.
    This front will extend roughly from eastern OK into southwest TX
    through the period, with substantial moisture flux northward into
    the lifting zone. As such, midday development is likely over much of west-central/northwest TX with expanding coverage across the
    remainder of northern TX, OK, and southern MO. Areas of elevated
    hail cannot be ruled out anywhere north of the front given strong
    deep-layer shear.

    Supercells with very large hail and perhaps a brief tornado prior to
    cold front surge are expected during the late afternoon over
    west-central TX south of the cold front, and perhaps as far north as
    the Red River as the low-level jet increases during the evening.
    Overnight, another round of storms will occur over western and
    central TX as the deeper cold front arrives coincident with the
    shortwave. Both damaging winds and embedded hail cores are expected
    with a linear storm mode.

    ..Jewell.. 04/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 19 05:36:16 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 190536
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 190534

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1234 AM CDT Sat Apr 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHWEST
    ARKANSAS INTO CENTRAL MISSOURI AND FAR WEST-CENTRAL ILLINOIS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected on Sunday from east Texas into the
    lower Missouri and middle Mississippi Valleys. The greatest damaging
    wind and tornado potential will be over portions of northern
    Arkansas into Missouri and far west-central Illinois.

    ...Eastern OK/ArkLaTex into the Mid-MS Valley...

    A compact upper shortwave trough located over the southern High
    Plains Sunday morning will lift northeast through the period,
    becoming oriented over the Mid/Upper MS Valley/Upper Great Lakes
    vicinity by Monday morning. A belt of intense south/southwest
    deep-layer flow associated with this feature will overspread
    portions of the eastern OK into the Ozarks and Mid-MS Valley, with a
    500 mb jet streak around 70-90 kt over the Lower MO Valley around
    21-00z.

    At the surface, low pressure over OK at the beginning of the period
    will lift north/northeast over the Lower MO Valley by 00z, and into
    southern WI by 12z Monday. A cold front will sweep east across the
    region as this occurs, while a warm front lifts northward across
    MO/IL. Southerly low-level flow will transport modest boundary-layer
    moisture northward across the Ozarks/Mid-MS Valley, with mainly low
    60s F dewpoints forecast. Mid-60s F dewpoints are more likely from
    eastern OK/AR southward.

    Some uncertainty still remains regarding the degree of
    destabilization across the region. Cloud cover and areas of
    precipitation during the morning hours could limit stronger
    destabilization, as well as prevent steepening of low-level lapse
    rates. Nevertheless, deep-layer flow will be quite strong during the
    day and into the evening (decreasing with southward extent toward
    east TX/northern LA). Forecast soundings indicate supercell wind
    profiles, and initial supercells may be possible ahead of the eastward-advancing cold front. Convection may tend to grow upscale
    into one or more line segments given linear forcing along the cold
    front. Nevertheless, tornadoes will be possible with either storm
    mode given backed low-level winds contributing to enlarged, looping
    low-level hodographs, and a strong low-level jet supporting 0-1 km
    SRH greater than 250 m2/s2. Swaths of damaging gusts also will be
    possible, especially as convection becomes organized into an
    eastward progressing line.

    ..Leitman.. 04/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 19 17:31:18 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 191731
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 191729

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1229 PM CDT Sat Apr 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER MUCH OF MISSOURI...NORTHERN ARKANSAS...AND FAR WESTERN ILLINOIS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected on Sunday from east Texas into the
    lower Missouri and middle Mississippi Valleys. The greatest damaging
    wind and tornado potential will be over portions of northern
    Arkansas into Missouri and far west-central Illinois.

    ...MO...AR...Portions of surrounding states...
    A compact shortwave trough will eject northeastward out of the TX
    Panhandle Sunday morning and into IA by evening. An intense leading
    speed max will accompany this wave with strong cooling aloft over
    OK, northwest AR, MO and IA. A surface low will deepen as it
    develops northward out of OK and into IA as well.

    The cold front will move across far eastern KS and OK and into AR
    and MO by mid afternoon, with a warm front moving north and
    extending from northern MO into central IL/IN/OH by 00Z. Moderate
    southerly winds in the low levels will aid moisture advection with
    low 60s F dewpoints behind the warm front.

    Early day rain and thunderstorms will likely be ongoing over MO and
    IL in association with the advancing warm front. Areas of heating
    will occur behind this activity, and ahead of the approaching cold
    front with up to 1000 J/kg MUCAPE developing.

    Storms will form by early afternoon over far eastern KS and OK, with
    an elongated and partially broken line of supercells from the IA/MO
    border into AR through 00Z. Wind profiles will favor supercells as
    the primary storm mode along the length of the cold front, with the
    most likely area for tornadoes from northern AR into central MO
    where instability may be strongest. Farther north, cooler midlevel
    temperatures and stronger low-level shear may still support
    supercells and tornado risk despite weaker instability.

    The severe threat will peak during the afternoon and early evening
    as the upper system pulls north of the area, however, at least
    isolated severe storms may persist into the night across IL and
    southward along the MS River.

    ..Jewell.. 04/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 20 05:18:54 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 200518
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 200517

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1217 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorm potential appears low on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper low/shortwave trough over the Upper Midwest on Monday
    morning will lift northeast across the Great Lakes into southern
    Ontario and western Quebec by Tuesday morning. Meanwhile, another
    upper shortwave trough over the northern Rockies will develop
    eastward to the northern Plains.

    ...Ohio Valley/Lower Great Lakes to the TN/Lower MS
    Valleys/Southeast TX...

    A belt of moderate southwesterly deep-layer flow associated with the
    Great Lakes upper trough will overspread much of the Ohio Valley
    into the Mid-Atlantic/Northeast. At the surface, low pressure will
    move in tandem with the upper trough from WI to western Quebec, with
    a trailing cold front developing east across the Ohio Valley to the north-central Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic vicinity. A narrow corridor
    of 250-500 J/kg MLCAPE may develop ahead of the front across the
    upper Ohio Valley vicinity. While instability and lapse rates and
    will remain poor, robust vertical shear may allow for a few stronger
    storms capable of producing locally strong wind gusts.

    The southern extent of the aforementioned cold front will stall over
    the TN/Lower MS Valley and into southeast TX. Better-quality
    boundary layer moisture will reside ahead of the boundary this far
    south, resulting in up to 1000 J/kg MLCAPE. However, vertical shear
    will be very modest. A couple of strong storms will be capable of
    locally strong gusts or small hail, but a lack of stronger vertical
    shear will likely limit longevity of any stronger/better organized
    updrafts, precluding severe probabilities.

    ...Northern Plains...

    Cold temperatures aloft with the upper shortwave trough will support
    steep midlevel lapse rates from MT into the northern Plains
    vicinity. This will support thunderstorm development during the
    afternoon into evening. While instability will remain weak, small
    hail may accompany stronger thunderstorm cores across MT into the
    western Dakotas. Additional thunderstorms may develop overnight
    eastern SD into southern MN/northern IA on the nose of a developing
    low-level jet. This activity also may produce small hail into early
    Tuesday morning.

    ..Leitman.. 04/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 20 17:06:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 201706
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 201704

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1204 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorm potential appears low on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper low/shortwave trough over the Upper Midwest on Monday
    morning will lift northeast across the Great Lakes into southern
    Ontario and western Quebec by Tuesday morning. Meanwhile, another
    upper shortwave trough over the northern Rockies will develop
    eastward to the northern Plains. At the surface, an area of low
    pressure will move from Wisconsin to Quebec through the period with
    a trailing cold front moving from the Ohio Valley to the
    north-central Appalachians and into the Mid-Atlantic. This front
    will be more stationary across the Mid-Mississippi Valley and may
    start to move north by the end of the period across south-central
    Texas.

    ...Ohio Valley/Lower Great Lakes to the TN/Lower MS
    Valleys/Southeast TX...
    A narrow corridor of mid 60s dewpoints may be present across the
    Ohio Valley on Monday which could result in some weak instability
    despite extensive cloud cover and poor lapse rates. Robust vertical
    shear could result in a few stronger storms capable of isolated
    damaging wind gusts, but the limited instability should keep the
    threat minimal overall.

    Better-quality boundary layer moisture, slightly better lapse rates,
    and the potential for some warming may result in greater instability
    farther south, perhaps up to 1000 J/kg MLCAPE. However, vertical
    shear will be very weak where this better instability is forecast to
    develop. A couple of strong storms will be capable of locally strong
    gusts or small hail, but a lack of stronger vertical shear will
    likely limit longevity of any stronger/better organized updrafts,
    precluding severe probabilities.

    ...Northern Plains...
    Cold temperatures aloft with the upper shortwave trough will support
    steep midlevel lapse rates from MT into the northern Plains
    vicinity. As weak instability develops across the northern Plains,
    scattered thunderstorms are possible. A well-mixed air mass could
    support an isolated severe wind threat, particularly across
    southwest South Dakota and vicinity where mid-level flow will be
    strongest.

    Additional thunderstorms may develop overnight across eastern SD
    into southern MN/northern IA on the nose of a developing low-level
    jet. This activity may produce small hail into early Tuesday
    morning.

    ..Bentley.. 04/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 21 05:55:38 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 210555
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 210554

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1254 AM CDT Mon Apr 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS INTO PARTS OF SOUTHERN KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible on Tuesday across
    portions of the southern Plains.

    ...Synopsis...

    Low-amplitude west/southwest mid/upper flow will prevail across the south-central and southeast states on Tuesday. A belt of stronger
    westerlies aloft will reside across the northern tier of the U.S. as
    a series of upper troughs migrate eastward from the northern Plains
    to the Northeast. At the surface, low pressure over Quebec and an
    associated cold front will be located from the Hudson Valley into
    the NC/VA Piedmont. Further west, low-level moist advection on south/southeasterly low level flow will allow modified Gulf moisture
    to spread northward from the Lower MS Valley into the southern High
    Plains.

    ...Southern Plains to southern KS...

    Modest Gulf moisture will spread north and west through the day to
    near the NM/TX border and across much of OK into southern KS.
    Forecast guidance suggest a weak shortwave impulse will eject across
    the southern Rockies in modest west/southwesterly flow aloft. While
    height tendencies will remain neutral, precluding much in the way of
    surface cyclogenesis, a sharpening dryline is forecast to extend
    from southwest KS into the OK/TX Panhandles, then southward near the
    NM/TX border. Low-level moist advection beneath steep midlevel lapse
    rates will support moderate destabilization (MLCAPE 1500-2500 J/kg).
    While deep-layer flow will remain modest, vertically veering wind
    profiles will contribute to supercell wind profiles, with
    elongated/straight hodographs. Isolated supercells will pose a risk
    for large hail. Furthermore, strong heating will result in steep
    low-level lapse rates and a well mixed boundary layer, supporting
    isolated strong to severe outflow gusts. As a southerly low-level
    jet increases during the evening, some potential will exist for
    convection to develop into an eastward developing MCS. If this
    occurs, some severe potential could persist eastward away from the
    dryline into portions of western north Texas and western OK.

    ...IA/WI/IL...

    A stalled frontal boundary will extent across the Mid-MO Valley into
    southern WI. Modest moisture return and persistent isentropic ascent
    along this boundary may be sufficient for isolated thunderstorm
    development amid weak diurnal destabilization. Low to midlevel flow
    will remain rather weak, but rapidly increase above 700 mb,
    supporting effective shear magnitudes greater than 40 kt. Cold
    temperatures aloft (-17 C near 500 mb) will support MLCAPE to around
    500 J/kg, and isolated convection could produce sporadic hail.

    ...Carolinas...

    A cold front associated with a surface low over Quebec will develop
    southeast across the Mid-Atlantic and Carolinas during the
    afternoon/evening. Strong heating of a modestly moist boundary layer
    ahead of the front will support a corridor of MLCAPE up to 1000-1500
    J/kg. Weak low-level southwesterly flow will increase with height,
    support effective shear magnitudes up to 35 kt. This should be
    sufficient for a few stronger/organized cells. Steep low-level lapse
    rates and somewhat elongated hodographs suggest transient supercells
    capable of strong gusts and isolated hail will be possible.

    ..Leitman.. 04/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 21 17:21:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 211721
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 211720

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1220 PM CDT Mon Apr 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND INTO PARTS OF SOUTHERN KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Tuesday
    across portions of the southern Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mostly zonal pattern will be in place across the CONUS with
    multiple embedded weak shortwave troughs on Tuesday. One such trough
    which is forecast to move across New Mexico during the afternoon may
    result in some weak lee troughing and support the potential for
    isolated to scattered severe storms along the dryline Tuesday
    afternoon.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    Low-level moisture will advect northward across West Texas ahead of
    a dryline Tuesday morning. Strong surface heating will lead to
    moderate to strong destabilization along and ahead of the dryline.
    Forecast soundings show a weakly capped airmass which should be
    sufficient for isolated to scattered thunderstorm development by mid
    to late afternoon as weak forcing from the mid-level trough
    overspreads the dryline. 30 to 35 knots of shear should support
    high-based, slow-moving supercells with a threat for large hail and
    severe wind gusts. An isolated tornado threat may also exist where
    better low-level moisture is present, farther south, and where
    intersecting boundaries could enhance low-level vorticity ingestion.

    Upscale growth may eventually occur with one or more MCSs moving
    east into the evening and overnight hours, supported by a modestly
    enhanced low-level jet.

    ...Northern Panhandle into Kansas...
    A surface front is forecast to extend across Kansas and into the
    OK/northern TX Panhandle by Tuesday afternoon. Only modest moisture
    recovery will occur this far north, but it may be sufficient for
    moderate instability along the front by mid-afternoon. 25 to 30
    knots of shear will support some storm organization. Very steep
    lapse rates and a relatively dry profile will support the potential
    for isolated large hail and severe wind gusts.

    ...IA/WI/IL...
    A stalled frontal boundary will be in place across the Mid-MO Valley
    into southern WI on Tuesday. Modest moisture return and persistent
    isentropic ascent along this boundary may be sufficient for isolated thunderstorm development amid weak diurnal destabilization. Low to
    midlevel flow will remain rather weak, but rapidly increase above
    700 mb, supporting effective shear magnitudes greater than 40 kt.
    Cold temperatures aloft (-17 C near 500 mb) will support MLCAPE to
    around 500 J/kg, and isolated convection could produce sporadic hail
    or damaging wind gusts.

    ...Carolinas...
    A cold front associated with a surface low over Quebec will move
    southeast across the Mid-Atlantic and Carolinas during the
    afternoon/evening. Strong heating of a modestly moist boundary layer
    ahead of the front will support a corridor of MLCAPE up to 1000-1500
    J/kg. Weak low-level southwesterly flow will increase with height,
    support effective shear magnitudes up to 35 kt. This should be
    sufficient for a few stronger/organized cells. Steep low-level lapse
    rates and somewhat elongated hodographs suggest transient supercells
    capable of strong gusts and isolated hail will be possible. In
    addition, any storms which interact with the sea breeze could have
    locally enhanced updrafts and a periodically greater large
    hail/damaging wind threat.

    ..Bentley.. 04/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 22 05:34:55 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 220534
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 220532

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1232 AM CDT Tue Apr 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across portions of the
    central and southern High Plains on Wednesday.

    ...Central/Southern Plains...

    A low-amplitude, modest southwesterly flow regime will persist
    across the Plains on Wednesday. At the surface, a stalled frontal
    boundary will extend from the Upper Midwest to the central High
    Plains, while a dryline extends south from southeast CO into
    southwest TX. Southerly low-level flow will maintain northward
    transport of modified Gulf moisture across TX/OK into the central
    Plains.

    Forecast guidance varies considerably regarding ongoing
    precipitation Wednesday morning. Some CAMs show widespread
    convection across KS, while other place morning convection further
    south along the Red River. This morning convection will potentially
    have implications for afternoon/evening severe potential as it may
    hinder diurnal destabilization, or produce outflow boundaries which
    could aid in redevelopment later in the day. Nevertheless, adequate
    boundary layer moisture beneath steep midlevel lapse rates and
    modest vertical shear (25-35 kt effective shear magnitudes) will
    support a broad area of at least Marginal (level 1 of 5) severe risk
    (strong winds and hail) from the central Plains along the stalled
    frontal boundary, south/southwest into the southern High Plains
    along the dry line.

    Some greater risk for a few supercells may develop along the dryline
    across west Texas. Stronger heating and higher surface dewpoints
    will foster greater destabilization. Elongated hodographs suggest
    isolated supercells capable of producing large hail will be
    possible. Furthermore, steep low-level lapse rates and deep boundary
    layer mixing may support sporadic strong/severe gusts. Given
    nebulous/weak large-scale ascent, storm coverage along the dryline
    is uncertain, and probabilities may need to be adjusted/extended
    northward if confidence increases in greater storm coverage.

    ..Leitman.. 04/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 22 17:34:16 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 221733
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 221731

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1231 PM CDT Tue Apr 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND ADJACENT PORTIONS OF THE TEXAS SOUTH
    PLAINS AND TRANSPECOS REGION...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across portions of the
    central and southern High Plains on Wednesday.

    ...Central Plains to the southern High Plains...
    Moderate west-southwesterly flow aloft is forecast aloft across the
    Plains, with only weak/embedded disturbances within this flow field
    forecast to shift eastward across the Plains region. Still, with
    the westerlies aloft maintaining weak lee troughing and potentially
    a weak low over the southeastern Colorado vicinity, low-level
    southerlies across the central/southern Plains will maintain a
    seasonably moist boundary layer.

    While convection and associated cloud cover ongoing early in the day
    -- particularly across the central Plains -- may hinder
    destabilization locally, afternoon insolation should support 1000 to
    2000 J/kg mixed-layer CAPE across a fairly broad area. New storm
    development should occur across the Iowa/Nebraska Kansas area during
    the afternoon, though location/coverage will likely be modulated by aforementioned/earlier storms and associated outflows. Where ample destabilization occurs, a few clusters of convection capable of
    producing locally strong/gusty winds and marginal hail can be
    expected.

    Greater severe risk -- associated with isolated supercell potential
    -- remains evident over the southern High Plains area and into the
    Transpecos region of Texas. Here, a less perturbed airmass should heat/destabilize through the day, ahead of an evolving dryline.
    With modest but veering flow with height, shear should be sufficient
    to support mid-level rotation with stronger storms. Large hail and
    locally damaging gusts will be the main risks with these storms.
    Some congealing/upscale growth may occur by early evening, as storms
    spread east-northeastward across parts of western Texas, but overall
    severe risk should gradually diminish diurnally.

    ...Parts of the Southeast...
    A weak mid-level vort max is forecast to be moving eastward across
    the central Gulf Coast region Wednesday afternoon, where a heating/destabilizing airmass is expected. Fairly steep mid-level
    lapse rates should be present across the Georgia/South Carolina
    vicinity, which will contribute to development of 1500 to 2000 J/kg
    mixed-layer CAPE across this area. While flow aloft will remain
    relatively weak, and thus storms generally rather disorganized, the
    degree of CAPE should support a few more vigorous updrafts. Along
    with potential for marginal hail, a relatively deep mixed layer
    expected to evolve through peak heating could also promote some
    evaporative enhancement to downdrafts -- possibly yielding locally
    strong wind gusts from a few of the stronger storms. Convection --
    and any ongoing severe risk -- will diminish after sunset.

    ..Goss.. 04/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 23 05:23:02 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 230522
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 230520

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1220 AM CDT Wed Apr 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible on Thursday from eastern
    Colorado into Kansas, and southward across west Texas and Oklahoma.
    Large hail and strong wind gusts will be possible with this
    activity.

    ...Central/Southern Plains...

    Another day of low-amplitude, modest west/southwesterly mid/upper
    flow is forecast across the Plains on Thursday. Remnant convection
    from the Day 1/Wed period may be ongoing during the morning across
    parts of KS/OK/TX, but the location of this activity is uncertain. Nevertheless, south/southeasterly low-level flow will maintain warm
    advection across the region to the east of a dryline extending
    southward from eastern CO into southwest TX, and to the south of a
    frontal boundary near the NE/KS border. Additionally, an outflow
    boundary from morning convection is forecast by some guidance to
    reside near the OK/KS border, but this will depend on how Day 1/Wed
    convection evolves into the Day 2 period.

    Where stronger diurnal heating occurs, a corridor of 1500-2000 J/kg
    MLCAPE is forecast, most likely from west TX into OK, with more
    modest moisture/instability expected into the central High Plains.
    While deep-layer flow will be modest, effective shear around 25-35
    kt will allow for isolated organized cells along the dryline in west
    TX, which may produce large hail and locally strong gusts. Further
    north across parts of eastern CO, modest moisture and upslope flow
    may support a few cells capable of producing hail and gusty winds.

    With eastward extent into KS/OK and perhaps western north TX,
    potential morning convection is resulting in quite a bit of
    uncertainty regarding how severe potential will evolve during the afternoon/evening. Re-invigoration of morning activity, or
    redevelopment along remnant outflow could result in scattered
    thunderstorm clusters. Large hail and strong gusts would be possible
    with this activity into the evening. Damaging gusts could become
    more likely during the evening if upscale growth can occur as a
    25-35 kt southerly low-level jet develops. Given the high degree of uncertainty, will maintain Marginal (level 1 of 5) probabilities
    across an expanded area.

    ..Leitman.. 04/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 23 17:22:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 231722
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 231721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1221 PM CDT Wed Apr 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EASTERN
    COLORADO EASTWARD ACROSS MUCH OF KANSAS...AND SOUTHWARD ACROSS
    OKLAHOMA AND NORTHERN/WESTERN TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible on Thursday from eastern
    Colorado into Kansas, and southward across west Texas and Oklahoma.
    Large hail and locally strong wind gusts will be possible with this
    activity.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad zone of modest west-southwesterly flow aloft will prevail
    across most of the country again on Thursday, though faster flow is
    progged over New England in conjunction with a short-wave trough
    moving eastward across southern Quebec and -- eventually -- northern
    New England. A second trough, off the West Coast, is expected to
    pivot eastward toward the central and southern California coast
    through the second half of the period.

    At the surface, frontal wave development is forecast along a
    baroclinic zone extending from southwestern Kansas into the Upper
    Midwest, as a mid-level short-wave trough moves through the
    background west-southwesterlies. By evening, a weak low is forecast
    over the Iowa vicinity, with some southward progression of the
    trailing front across Kansas. Meanwhile, a dryline is forecast to
    mix eastward during the afternoon across the Texas Panhandle and
    South Plains areas, while remaining more stationary but sharpening
    across the Davis Mountains area. The aforementioned front, and the
    dryline, should both focus diurnal increases in thunderstorm
    activity.

    ...Eastern Colorado and Kansas south across Oklahoma and
    northern/western Texas...
    Thunderstorms are forecast to be ongoing at the start of the period
    across portions of the MRGL risk area, including western Kansas and
    potentially portions of the Concho Valley area of Texas. The Texas
    convection is forecast to weaken with time, though the Kansas storms
    -- occurring in the vicinity of the surface baroclinic zone -- may
    persist through the day.

    By afternoon, as heating of the moist warm sector contributes to
    moderate destabilization, additional storm
    development/intensification is forecast across southern Kansas, and
    southward along the dryline mixing across western Texas. While
    deep-layer flow across the region is forecast to remain somewhat weak/sub-optimal in terms of more robust severe potential, veering
    winds with height should contribute to ample shear for mid-level
    rotation with developing storms. Large hail and locally damaging
    winds can be expected with the strongest cells.

    Though tornado risk will remain limited overall, slightly greater
    potential may evolve across the southwestern Kansas/northwestern
    Oklahoma area, and adjacent, eastern portions of the Texas/Oklahoma
    Panhandles. Here, near a weak low at the intersection of the
    surface front and the dryline, backed low-level flow and slightly
    stronger mid-level west-southwesterlies may support potential for a
    tornado during the afternoon/early evening.

    Storms across this area may congeal/grow upscale during the evening,
    spreading eastward across the Oklahoma/North Texas area as a
    low-level jet nocturnally increases. Attendant, local risk for
    hail/wind may persist through the evening.

    ..Goss.. 04/23/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 24 05:24:13 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 240521
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 240520

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1220 AM CDT Thu Apr 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS EXTREME
    EASTERN NEW MEXICO...NORTHWEST TEXAS AND PORTIONS OF
    SOUTHWEST/CENTRAL OKLAHOMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of Oklahoma,
    northwest Texas, and extreme eastern New Mexico Friday afternoon and
    evening.

    ...Southern Plains...

    An upper ridge will build over the Plains on Friday. Despite the
    building ridge, midlevel temperatures will remain somewhat cool (-10
    to -14 C at 500 mb) and weak shortwave impulse is expected to
    meander through the upper ridge during the afternoon/evening. At the
    surface, a cold front will sag southward across KS into
    northern/central OK and the TX Panhandle by 00-03z. A dryline also
    will extend southward across southwest TX. Some forecast guidance
    suggests remnant convection from the Day 1/Thu period could be
    ongoing across parts of eastern OK/KS Friday morning. This is
    uncertain, but if this occurs, an outflow boundary may also extend
    across portions of OK. Modest boundary layer moisture beneath steep
    midlevel lapse rates will support moderate instability, especially
    where stronger heating occurs. The aforementioned surface boundaries
    will serve as foci for potential thunderstorm development during the afternoon/evening. Elongated hodographs and effective shear near 30
    kt suggests any storms that develop could produce large hail. Where
    stronger heating occurs, steep low-level lapse rates also could
    support sporadic strong gusts.

    ...OH Valley...

    An upper shortwave trough will develop east across southeast Canada
    and the Great Lakes vicinity on Friday. Stronger westerly flow aloft
    will largely remain over the Great Lakes and Canada and lag behind a
    surface cold front. This surface cold front is forecast to move
    across the Ohio Valley during the afternoon and evening. Modest
    boundary layer moisture ahead of the front will support modest
    destabilization. However, vertical shear is expected to remain
    fairly weak. Scattered thunderstorms are expected, and a few
    stronger cells could produce locally gusty winds or perhaps small
    hail. Overall severe potential is expected to remain limited.

    ..Leitman.. 04/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Apr 24 17:29:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 241729
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 241727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1227 PM CDT Thu Apr 24 2025

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF OKLAHOMA...NORTHERN AND WESTERN TEXAS...AND FAR EASTERN NEW
    MEXICO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across parts of Oklahoma,
    northwest Texas, and extreme eastern New Mexico Friday afternoon and
    evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper trough progressing east-southeastward across Ontario and
    the Upper Great Lakes region Friday will support surface
    cyclogenesis over the Lower Michigan area. As the low
    develops/shifts eastward with time, a surface cold front will
    advance southeastward across the Ohio and Mid Mississippi Valleys,
    and more slowly southward across the Oklahoma area.

    Meanwhile in the West, an upper low over the eastern Pacific will
    deepen and shift southeastward, reaching the central California
    Coast overnight. In response, downstream ridging will amplify
    across the central U.S. through the period.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Convection may be ongoing at the start of the period across parts of
    the Oklahoma/Kansas area, in the vicinity of the sagging cold front.
    Despite ridging aloft, rather weak warm-sector capping should
    support isolated to scattered storm redevelopment by afternoon,
    particularly near the front as it shifts southward across Oklahoma
    and the Texas Panhandle/South Plains through the day. Moderate
    afternoon destabilization, but modest shear, and large-scale
    ridging, suggests only isolated severe risk -- mainly in the form of
    hail and locally gusty/damaging winds. Low-level jet development
    expected during the evening over the High Plains may help sustain
    convection through the overnight hours.

    ...Elsewhere...
    Scattered thunderstorms -- and perhaps a couple of stronger storms
    capable of producing gusty winds and small hail -- are expected
    across parts of the Great Lakes/Midwest/Mid South region, near and
    ahead of the aforementioned/advancing cold front. Modest CAPE is
    expected across the area, and with rather weak shear as well, any
    severe risk would likely remain quite limited/local.

    ..Goss.. 04/24/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 25 05:54:52 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 250553
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 250551

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CDT Fri Apr 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND ADJACENT WEST TEXAS AND THE TEXAS
    PANHANDLE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible on Saturday
    across portions of eastern New Mexico into West Texas and the Texas
    Panhandle.

    ...Synopsis...
    An mid-level low will move across southern California and into the
    southern Great Basin on Saturday. As this trough advances east,
    mid-level ridging across the central CONUS will start to shift east
    through the day. A mid-level trough will amplify across Ontario and
    into the Northeast on Saturday and Saturday night. Surface high
    pressure will move into the Great Lakes in the wake of this trough.
    As low-pressure develops across the Rockies in response to the
    eastward advancing mid-level low, the pressure gradient will tighten
    across the Plains with strengthening southerly flow and northward
    moisture transport.

    ...Southern High Plains...
    As low-pressure develops in the west, a southerly low-level jet will
    strengthen Friday night and early Saturday morning which will likely
    lead to widespread storm coverage in the vicinity of a surface front
    from the Texas Panhandle/southern Oklahoma/northern Texas. This
    ongoing convection could have significant impacts on northward
    moisture recovery, and any remnant boundaries could also be a focus
    for severe weather later in the day Saturday, particularly across
    the Texas Panhandle and vicinity. Details remain uncertain at this
    time due to ongoing MCSs this morning and the potential for several
    additional convective systems Friday and Friday night. However,
    there is relatively higher confidence in some severe weather threat
    across far eastern New Mexico, parts of the Texas Panhandle, and
    adjacent areas. This zone is where the greatest overlap in buoyancy
    and shear is expected, with some potential for outflow boundaries to
    be an additional focus for storms on Saturday. A few supercells may
    be possible with a threat for isolated large hail or wind gusts, and
    perhaps a tornado.

    ..Bentley.. 04/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Apr 25 17:30:14 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 251730
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 251728

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 PM CDT Fri Apr 25 2025

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF EASTERN NEW MEXICO AND ADJACENT WESTERN TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A couple of strong to severe thunderstorms are possible on Saturday
    across portions of eastern New Mexico into adjacent western Texas.

    ...Synopsis...
    Large-scale ridging aloft will persist across the central U.S.
    Saturday, as short-wave troughing over the Great Lakes region moves
    into/across the Lower Lakes/Northeast, and a western U.S. upper low
    makes slow eastward progress across California and into Nevada.

    At the surface, a cold front will shift eastward across the
    Northeast and Mid-Atlantic region, while trailing westward across
    the Gulf Coast states and into the southern Plains.

    ...Parts of eastern New Mexico and adjacent western Texas...
    Widespread convection is forecast to be ongoing at the start of the
    period within a zone from far eastern New Mexico eastward to
    Oklahoma/North Texas. Resulting cloud cover and likely southward
    progression of outflow across western Texas casts some uncertainty
    with respect to recovery of the afternoon airmass across the MRGL
    risk area. Presuming ample heating occurs, isolated, new-storm
    development -- likely near remnant outflow -- may pose additional
    potential for local, all-hazards severe potential. This area will
    likely require some adjustment in later outlooks, as the effects of
    early-day convection can be more accurately ascertained.

    ..Goss.. 04/25/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 26 06:03:42 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 260602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 260600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Sat Apr 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MUCH OF
    CENTRAL AND NORTHWEST NEBRASKA...SOUTHERN SOUTH DAKOTA...AND FAR
    NORTHERN KANSAS....

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe storms are possible across the southern High Plains
    and central Plains Sunday afternoon/evening. Scattered severe storms
    are possible across the northern Plains and Upper Midwest Sunday
    evening/night.

    ...Discussion...
    A moderately strong mid-level jet streak will extend from the
    Southwest and into the Central Plains on Sunday as a mid-level
    trough advances eastward through the Intermountain West. As this
    occurs, a strong surface cyclone will develop in the central High Plains/northern Plains. This strengthening cyclone will draw richer
    low-level moisture into the northern Plains while a dryline sharpens
    across the High Plains.

    This dryline will extend from southwest Nebraska southward to the
    Texas Big Bend on Sunday afternoon. Mid to upper 60s dewpoints east
    of this dryline and strong heating will support moderate to strong
    instability by Sunday afternoon. Forecast soundings show significant
    inhibition along the dryline in the southern High Plains with lesser
    inhibition with increasing latitude. Weak height falls and a sharp
    dryline circulation could support isolated supercell development
    along the dryline from southwest Kansas southward. A favorable
    environment will support a conditional threat for all severe weather
    hazards wherever supercells can develop within this region, but
    coverage concerns preclude a greater categorical risk at this time.

    Farther north, near the surface low, storm coverage probabilities
    increase due to stronger forcing and weaker inhibition. At least a
    few supercells are likely from northern Kansas across Nebraska and
    perhaps into far southern South Dakota Sunday evening with a threat
    for large hail and severe wind gusts. Hodographs will be relatively
    small during the evening, but once the low-level jet intensifies
    after 00Z, hodographs will enlarge quite rapidly with increasing
    low-level shear in the 00Z to 02Z timeframe. However, storm
    longevity and intensity after sunset remains questionable as
    forecast soundings show strong inhibition across much of the open
    warm sector. Therefore, any supercells which develop, may mostly
    exist prior to the strengthening low-level shear. Therefore, only 2
    percent tornado probabilities are warranted at this time despite a
    considerably higher conditional threat. Scattered thunderstorms
    capable of large hail are expected to develop late Sunday evening
    and into the overnight hours along and north of the warm front as
    isentropic ascent strengthens with the associated strengthening
    low-level jet.

    ..Bentley.. 04/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Apr 26 17:19:51 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 261719
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 261718

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1218 PM CDT Sat Apr 26 2025

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF THE NORTHERN/CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Sunday
    evening into early morning Monday across parts of the northern and
    central Great Plains. Large hail should be the predominant hazard.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong upper-level jetlet will eject through the basal portion of
    a broad trough over the West. This should overspread the southern
    Rockies into the central High Plains by Sunday night. Primary
    surface cyclone will diurnally deepen over the central High Plains,
    with a secondary low downstream of the Bighorn Mountains. The
    primary low will advance northeast into the central SD vicinity by
    12Z Monday. A north/south-oriented lee trough/dryline will extend
    through the southern High Plains.

    ...Northern Great Plains to NE...
    Large-scale ascent will be focused across this region, especially
    Sunday evening/night as mid-level height falls/upper-level
    diffluence increase ahead of the approaching trough/jet streak. Two
    corridors of initial storm development are apparent by early
    evening, centered on the NE Panhandle and southeast MT, just ahead
    of the aforementioned surface lows. Rich low-level moisture will
    likely remain displaced to the southeast of both regions, but
    adequate moisture should be present for a few supercells with
    low-level southeasterlies beneath strengthening southwesterly
    mid/upper winds. The breadth of the uncapped warm-moist sector will
    be confined though and convection will likely become predominately
    elevated Sunday night. However, increasing convective coverage is
    anticipated within the exit region of a strong low-level jet nosing
    into the Mid-MO Valley. Large hail should be the overarching threat,
    with a mixed wind/hail threat possibly evolving amid signals of a
    linear cluster into western/central SD.

    ...KS to west TX...
    A very conditional severe threat will extend along the dryline. A
    plume of large buoyancy coincident with a supercell wind profile
    will exist from northwest TX into western KS. Forcing for ascent,
    outside of a weakly retreating dryline circulation, is nebulous.
    Thunderstorm probabilities appear to be around 10 percent or less,
    outside of the TX Big Bend during the late afternoon and evening.

    ..Grams.. 04/26/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 27 06:00:54 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 270600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 270559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Sun Apr 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM CENTRAL
    IOWA INTO SOUTHEAST MINNESOTA AND WESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    An outbreak of severe weather remains likely across portions of the
    Upper Midwest, centered on Monday afternoon and evening. Very large
    hail, strong tornadoes, and damaging winds are expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong (~75 knot) mid-level jet streak will advance from the
    central Plains to the Upper Midwest on Monday. As this occurs, a
    surface low will deepen across the Upper Midwest with an eastward
    advancing dryline to its south and a cold front to the
    west-southwest. A warm front will extend east of this surface low
    and move rapidly north through the day, spreading mid 60s dewpoints
    across much of the Upper Midwest.

    ...MN/IA/WI...
    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    north of a warm front across Minnesota and Wisconsin amid moderate
    isentropic ascent. Isolated large hail will be possible from these
    storms. A surface low will be located somewhere near eastern South
    Dakota and will start to advance east during the morning. This
    surface low is expected to deepen somewhat through the day (perhaps
    to the low 990s mb range) as it moves toward the Twin Cities. There
    is a consistent signal for thunderstorms to develop along the cold
    front as it intersects the surface low/dryline in west-central
    Minnesota Monday afternoon. After some initial hail threat, these
    storms will likely become quickly linear along the front with an
    increasing severe wind threat. Strong low-level shear will also
    favor some line-embedded tornadoes, particularly if there area any
    areas within the line which become more favorably oriented to the
    low-level shear vector.

    Additional thunderstorms are forecast to develop along the dryline
    from southern Minnesota to west-central Iowa during the afternoon on
    Monday. 00Z CAM guidance is not overly bullish with convective
    development south of the MN/IA border, likely due to relatively weak convergence along the dryline in western Iowa from most high
    resolution guidance. However, the lack of convection from much of
    the guidance does not seem realistic considering the overall
    pattern. ECMWF/GFS/NAM are fairly consistent with a deepening
    surface low across Minnesota and moderate to strong height falls
    across the dryline. The southern extent of the previous Day 3
    moderate risk corresponds well to the southern extent of the more
    favorable height falls, and convective precipitation signal from the
    ECMWF/GFS. Therefore, no adjustments to the southern extent of the
    moderate risk were deemed necessary. However the moderate risk was
    expanded slightly westward to account for the expectation for
    earlier convective initiation (19-21Z) than shown by most guidance.
    Given very strong effective shear and over 3000 J/kg MLCAPE, expect
    any supercells which develop to become quickly severe with a threat
    for all severe weather hazards.

    As the surface low across Minnesota deepens the low-level jet is
    also forecast to strengthen across Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
    This will elongate low-level hodographs and support an increasing
    tornado threat during the evening. STP values of 3 to 5 are common
    across much of the warm sector ahead of anticipated storms with some
    guidance indicating values of 7 to 10. Therefore, any mature,
    discrete supercells which can form and maintain within the open warm
    sector on Monday late afternoon/evening will pose a threat for
    strong to potentially intense tornadoes.

    ...Eastern Kansas and northern Missouri to West Texas...
    Overall forcing will be weaker farther south along the dryline, but
    subtle height falls across a mostly uncapped warm sector could
    result in isolated to scattered supercell development Monday
    afternoon. A secondary area of higher severe weather probabilities
    may exist from portions of West Texas into southwest Oklahoma where
    the nocturnally strengthening low-level jet could support scattered
    supercell development Monday evening. However, weak height rises
    cast some doubt on storm coverage during the evening, precluding
    higher probabilities at this time.

    ..Bentley.. 04/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Apr 27 17:34:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 271734
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 271733

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1233 PM CDT Sun Apr 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN SOUTHERN
    MN/NORTHERN IA/WESTERN WI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Multiple corridors of severe thunderstorms are expected across the
    Upper Midwest on Monday into Monday night, with a regional severe
    weather outbreak possible. The most dangerous period is likely
    during the late afternoon and evening when strong tornado potential
    should be maximized. Scattered large to very large hail and damaging
    winds are likely as well.

    ...Synopsis...
    A positive-tilt, upper-level trough will consist of multiple
    embedded shortwave impulses, moving east-northeast from the central
    High Plains to the Upper Midwest. A belt of 70+ kt 500-mb
    southwesterlies will be present from the central Great Plains to the
    Upper MS Valley on Monday afternoon. Primary surface cyclone should
    deepen slightly during the day as it advances from eastern SD to the
    Upper Great Lakes. A dryline will extend from the Mid-MO Valley
    south-southwest into west TX. A cold front will overtake the dryline
    as it surges southeast Monday night.

    ...Upper Midwest...
    After coordination with affected WFOs, primary adjustments have
    occurred along the southern extent of the severe probabilities to
    account for a more conditional, but still potentially significant
    severe threat.

    An arc of elevated thunderstorms will be ongoing at 12Z Monday from
    ND across the Upper MS Valley. Isolated large hail will be possible
    with these morning storms as they move east-northeast. Additional
    elevated storms will redevelop towards midday/early afternoon to the
    northeast of the aforementioned surface low. This will slow the
    advancement of the surface warm front into central MN, but
    strengthen differential surface heating across the baroclinic zone,
    with greater warming nosing north from NE into southeast SD.
    Surface-based storm development should occur by mid-afternoon across
    a portion of the Mid-MO Valley into southwest/west-central MN along
    the dryline to surface low. Large hail should be the primary initial
    threat, but cells may congeal into linear clusters, especially
    near/across the warm front. A mix of hail/wind/embedded tornadoes is
    likely, with the latter increasing with southern/eastern extent
    during late afternoon owing to stronger low-level shear across
    southeast MN/northeast IA into western WI.

    Open warm-sector storm development ahead of the dryline is nebulous
    with low confidence on the degree of ascent ahead of the dryline
    given the synoptic setup. Conditionally, both the buoyancy/shear
    parameter space is volatile and supportive of potential for multiple long-track, tornadic supercells. Timing of mid-level height falls
    tends to favor the evening period after peak heating but CAM
    signals, outside of the 12Z FV3, are sparse. Greater large-scale
    ascent appears focused from far northeast IA into WI. This region
    remains the most favorable for discrete warm-sector development
    during the evening. Otherwise, upstream linear clusters from
    southern/eastern MN will likely spread across northern/central WI
    into parts of Upper MI with a mixed mode of all hazards persisting,
    before eventually weakening overnight.

    ...Eastern KS/northern MO to west TX...
    Overall forcing will be weaker farther south along the dryline, but
    subtle mid-level height falls across a mostly uncapped warm sector
    should result in isolated to scattered supercell development during
    the late afternoon to evening. This appears most likely across
    western north TX into southwest OK where greater boundary-layer
    heating and a nocturnally strengthening low-level jet are
    anticipated.

    ..Grams.. 04/27/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 28 06:11:19 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 280610
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 280609

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0109 AM CDT Mon Apr 28 2025

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PORTIONS OF
    EASTERN OHIO INTO THE LOWER GREAT LAKES REGION...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are likely across parts of the Lower
    Great Lakes on Tuesday afternoon/evening. Scattered severe
    thunderstorms are possible southwestward into the southern Great
    Plains. Isolated significant-severe potential, mainly from hail, is
    apparent across west Texas and separately in parts of the eastern
    Midwest to Lower Great Lakes.

    ...Synopsis...
    A consolidated shortwave trough will move eastward across the Great
    Lakes and southeast Canada on Tuesday. A southern-stream trough over
    the Southwest to northwest Mexico should drift east. Primary surface
    cyclone over northeast ON should quickly progress towards the
    Canadian Maritimes. An attendant cold front will push across the
    central to Lower Great Lakes Tuesday afternoon and evening. A weaker
    surface low should remain anchored over the TX Trans-Pecos.

    ...Eastern Ohio Valley/Lower Great Lakes...
    Ahead of the cold front, the warm sector across the Ohio Valley into
    the Lower Great Lakes region should destabilize through the
    morning/early afternoon. Initially, storms will develop across
    eastern Ohio into the Lower Great Lakes near the aforementioned
    surface low/cold front interface. Large hail will be the initial
    threat with supercell modes before a tendency to cluster and grow
    upscale. This will bring an increase in the potential for scattered
    to widespread damaging wind as the front shifts eastward with bowing
    line segments/clusters through time.

    ...TX/OK...
    A secondary weaker surface low will develop across western Texas
    near the vicinity of the dryline and a stationary front across
    portions of central Oklahoma into southern Kansas Tuesday afternoon.
    This region will be the focus of supercell development by the
    afternoon, with potential for large to very large hail, severe wind,
    and a tornado. An Enhanced Risk for hail may be needed in further
    outlook updates, given the steep lapse rates and supercellular
    modes, but uncertainty on coverage warrants re-evaluation as
    mesoscale details become more clear.

    ..Thornton/Bentley.. 04/28/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Apr 28 17:26:48 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 281726
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 281725

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1225 PM CDT Mon Apr 28 2025

    Valid 291200Z - 301200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN OH TO
    WESTERN NY AND PARTS OF WEST TX TO SOUTHWEST OK...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible within a broad swath
    from the Lower Great Lakes to the southern High Plains, mainly
    during the afternoon to evening on Tuesday. More probable corridors
    of greater threat are apparent over the Upper Ohio Valley/Lower
    Great Lakes and in parts of west Texas into southwest Oklahoma.

    ...Synopsis...
    A consolidated shortwave trough will accelerate eastward across the
    Great Lakes and southeast Canada, while a southern-stream trough
    over the Southwest to northwest Mexico slowly moves east. Primary
    surface low near the northern ON/QC border will quickly progress
    towards the Canadian Maritimes. An attendant cold front will push
    across the Lower Great Lakes Tuesday afternoon and evening. A weaker
    surface low should remain anchored over the TX Trans-Pecos.

    ...OH Valley and Lower Great Lakes...
    Forecast scenario is marred by uncertainty regarding evolution of
    remnant convection on Tuesday morning in the Midwest to Lower OH
    Valley, and signals for weaker mid-level lapse rates/instability
    relative to yesterday. Consensus of guidance suggests this morning
    convection should persist east and strengthen early in the diurnal
    heating cycle into the Upper OH Valley along related large-scale
    outflow. This could temper the northern extent of overall
    severe-storm coverage/intensity, as destabilization ahead of the
    cold front becomes limited. A distinct outlier in guidance, the 12Z
    ARW-NSSL, still indicates a favorable scenario for a more widespread
    wind and embedded hail threat, centered on the level 3-ENH risk
    area. The northern extent of the severe threat appears more
    conditional, but a few supercells remain possible with strong
    deep-layer shear and greater large-scale ascent in the lee of the
    Lower Great Lakes.

    ...West TX to the Ozarks...
    Multiple rounds of thunderstorms are expected through the period
    along a quasi-stationary front that should shift slowly south via
    convective outflows. With persistent moderate to strong mid-level southwesterlies downstream of the AZ/NM trough, supercells and
    organized clusters are anticipated along the baroclinic zone. Peak
    severe threat should remain diurnally driven as differential heating
    across the composite front/outflows increases. The most probable
    corridor for supercells producing very large hail and a couple
    tornadoes appears to be from parts of the Permian Basin into
    southwest OK during the late afternoon. This activity should
    consolidate into broad clusters/MCSs by early evening with
    small-scale bowing structures possible. This should support isolated
    to scattered severe gusts as well before convection subsides.
    Another round of isolated severe is expected in the Permian Basin/TX
    South Plains vicinity Tuesday night, as the low-level jet
    strengthens south of the convectively modulated front.

    ..Grams.. 04/28/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 29 05:53:58 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 290553
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 290552

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1252 AM CDT Tue Apr 29 2025

    Valid 301200Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS NORTH-CENTRAL TEXAS...SOUTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA...WESTERN/CENTRAL ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Wednesday, centered
    on central Texas to eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas. Large
    hail, damaging wind, and a few tornadoes will be possible with
    thunderstorm activity.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough is expected to move eastward across the Southern
    Plains on Wednesday, with multiple rounds of thunderstorm activity
    possible across portions of Texas and Oklahoma. At the start of the
    period Wednesday morning, convection should be ongoing across
    western Oklahoma into northern Texas near the surface low. This
    activity will continue to track eastward through the period and
    intensify through the afternoon/evening, as the surface low moves
    north and eastward. Additional thunderstorm development is expected
    along the southern fringe near the dryline in north-central Texas.

    A warm front extending across portions of Missouri, southern
    Indiana, southern Illinois into northern Kentucky may be the focus
    of strong to severe thunderstorm development Wednesday afternoon.

    ...Southern Plains into the Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The aforementioned thunderstorm activity early in the period
    Wednesday morning is expected to intensify through the afternoon, as
    daytime heating and increasing moisture leads to destabilization
    downstream in the warm sector. By the afternoon, the dryline across
    central Texas will be the focus of new development as upper level
    forcing overspreads the region. With multiple rounds of convection
    expected across the Texas Panhandle into western Oklahoma and north
    Texas in the D1 period, there is some uncertainty on where all the
    mesoscale features will be as this occurs. Nonetheless, it appears
    that ahead of the dryline the environment will be characterized by
    steep lapse rates, modest MLCAPE, and strong deep layer shear. This
    will support potential for a few supercells initially capable of
    very large hail. Should the mode remain favorable, the tornado risk
    will increase through the afternoon as the low-level jet strengthens
    and low-level curvature of hodographs increases. A more favorable
    corridor for tornadoes may exist near the Red River across
    southeastern Oklahoma/northern Texas. Upscale growth will promote
    potential for damaging wind, especially across eastern Oklahoma into
    western Arkansas. However, shear will also support potential for
    line embedded circulations.

    Additional thunderstorms may re-develop further west across the
    Texas Panhandle Wednesday afternoon, with potential for large hail.
    At this time, it is uncertain how much recovery can happen from
    multiple rounds of convection late D1 into D2 across this region.

    ...Lower MO/OH Valleys...
    Along the warm front from southern Indiana into southern Illinois
    and northern Kentucky, thunderstorm development is possible
    Wednesday afternoon. Forcing remains weaker across this region, with
    the shortwave back in the southern Plains. However, profiles would
    be supportive of a supercell or two in this region, given the plume
    of steep low to mid-level lapse rates, buoyancy, and sufficient
    shear. These would be capable of hail, severe wind, and potentially
    a tornado. For now, some uncertainty on coverage keeps probabilities
    low.

    ..Thornton/Bentley.. 04/29/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 29 17:16:03 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 291715
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 291715

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL
    1215 PM CDT Tue Apr 29 2025

    Valid 301200Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER NORTH-CENTRAL
    TEXAS... SOUTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA... WESTERN/CENTRAL ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Wednesday, centered
    on central Texas to eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas. Large
    hail, damaging wind, and a few tornadoes will be possible with
    thunderstorm activity.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough is expected to move eastward across the Southern
    Plains on Wednesday, with multiple rounds of thunderstorm activity
    possible across portions of Texas and Oklahoma. At the start of the
    period Wednesday morning, convection should be ongoing across
    western Oklahoma into northern Texas near the surface low. This
    activity will continue to track eastward through the period and
    intensify through the afternoon/evening, as the surface low moves
    north and eastward. Additional thunderstorm development is expected
    along the southern fringe near the dryline in north-central Texas.

    A warm front extending across portions of Missouri, southern
    Indiana, southern Illinois into northern Kentucky may be the focus
    of strong to severe thunderstorm development Wednesday afternoon.

    ...Southern Plains into the Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The aforementioned thunderstorm activity early in the period
    Wednesday morning is expected to intensify through the afternoon, as
    daytime heating and increasing moisture leads to destabilization
    downstream in the warm sector. By the afternoon, the dryline across
    central Texas will be the focus of new development as upper level
    forcing overspreads the region. With multiple rounds of convection
    expected across the Texas Panhandle into western Oklahoma and north
    Texas in the D1 period, there is some uncertainty on where all the
    mesoscale features will be as this occurs. Nonetheless, it appears
    that ahead of the dryline the environment will be characterized by
    steep lapse rates, modest MLCAPE, and strong deep layer shear. This
    will support potential for a few supercells initially capable of
    very large hail. Should the mode remain favorable, the tornado risk
    will increase through the afternoon as the low-level jet strengthens
    and low-level curvature of hodographs increases. A more favorable
    corridor for tornadoes may exist near the Red River across
    southeastern Oklahoma/northern Texas. Upscale growth will promote
    potential for damaging wind, especially across eastern Oklahoma into
    western Arkansas. However, shear will also support potential for
    line embedded circulations.

    Additional thunderstorms may re-develop further west across the
    Texas Panhandle Wednesday afternoon, with potential for large hail.
    At this time, it is uncertain how much recovery can happen from
    multiple rounds of convection late D1 into D2 across this region.

    ...Lower MO/OH Valleys...
    Along the warm front from southern Indiana into southern Illinois
    and northern Kentucky, thunderstorm development is possible
    Wednesday afternoon. Forcing remains weaker across this region, with
    the shortwave back in the southern Plains. However, profiles would
    be supportive of a supercell or two in this region, given the plume
    of steep low to mid-level lapse rates, buoyancy, and sufficient
    shear. These would be capable of hail, severe wind, and potentially
    a tornado. For now, some uncertainty on coverage keeps probabilities
    low.

    ..15_ows.. 04/29/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Apr 29 17:53:40 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 291752
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 291715

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    Issued by 15th OWS Scott Air Force Base IL
    1215 PM CDT Tue Apr 29 2025

    Valid 301200Z - 011200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER NORTH-CENTRAL
    TEXAS... SOUTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA... WESTERN/CENTRAL ARKANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Wednesday, centered
    on central Texas to eastern Oklahoma and western Arkansas. Large
    hail, damaging wind, and a few tornadoes will be possible with
    thunderstorm activity.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough is expected to move eastward across the Southern
    Plains on Wednesday, with multiple rounds of thunderstorm activity
    possible across portions of Texas and Oklahoma. At the start of the
    period Wednesday morning, convection should be ongoing across
    western Oklahoma into northern Texas near the surface low. This
    activity will continue to track eastward through the period and
    intensify through the afternoon/evening, as the surface low moves
    north and eastward. Additional thunderstorm development is expected
    along the southern fringe near the dryline in north-central Texas.

    A warm front extending across portions of Missouri, southern
    Indiana, southern Illinois into northern Kentucky may be the focus
    of strong to severe thunderstorm development Wednesday afternoon.

    ...Southern Plains into the Lower Mississippi Valley...
    The aforementioned thunderstorm activity early in the period
    Wednesday morning is expected to intensify through the afternoon, as
    daytime heating and increasing moisture leads to destabilization
    downstream in the warm sector. By the afternoon, the dryline across
    central Texas will be the focus of new development as upper level
    forcing overspreads the region. With multiple rounds of convection
    expected across the Texas Panhandle into western Oklahoma and north
    Texas in the D1 period, there is some uncertainty on where all the
    mesoscale features will be as this occurs. Nonetheless, it appears
    that ahead of the dryline the environment will be characterized by
    steep lapse rates, modest MLCAPE, and strong deep layer shear. This
    will support potential for a few supercells initially capable of
    very large hail. Should the mode remain favorable, the tornado risk
    will increase through the afternoon as the low-level jet strengthens
    and low-level curvature of hodographs increases. A more favorable
    corridor for tornadoes may exist near the Red River across
    southeastern Oklahoma/northern Texas. Upscale growth will promote
    potential for damaging wind, especially across eastern Oklahoma into
    western Arkansas. However, shear will also support potential for
    line embedded circulations.

    Additional thunderstorms may re-develop further west across the
    Texas Panhandle Wednesday afternoon, with potential for large hail.
    At this time, it is uncertain how much recovery can happen from
    multiple rounds of convection late D1 into D2 across this region.

    ...Lower MO/OH Valleys...
    Along the warm front from southern Indiana into southern Illinois
    and northern Kentucky, thunderstorm development is possible
    Wednesday afternoon. Forcing remains weaker across this region, with
    the shortwave back in the southern Plains. However, profiles would
    be supportive of a supercell or two in this region, given the plume
    of steep low to mid-level lapse rates, buoyancy, and sufficient
    shear. These would be capable of hail, severe wind, and potentially
    a tornado. For now, some uncertainty on coverage keeps probabilities
    low.

    ..15_ows.. 04/29/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 30 06:01:15 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 300601
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 300559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Wed Apr 30 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR CENTRAL TEXAS
    INTO THE MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong/locally severe thunderstorm development is expected from
    central Texas into the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys northward to the
    Great Lakes Thursday. Thunderstorms will pose a risk for strong to
    severe winds and hail.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad region of southwesterly flow aloft will extend across the
    lower Mississippi River Valley into the Great Lakes region Thursday,
    with a mid-level vort max forecast to be moving eastward across the
    Ozarks toward the Ohio Valley. Weak low pressure initially progged
    to reside over the Missouri vicinity will gradually deepen as it
    shifts east-northeastward into the Midwest through the day before
    moving across Lower Michigan and into Ontario overnight. A trailing
    cold front is forecast to shift gradually southeastward across the
    Midwest/Mid Mississippi Valley/southern Plains through the period.

    ...Lower Great Lakes southwestward to Texas...
    Thunderstorm activity will likely be ongoing near the front at the
    edge of the Marginal Risk at the beginning of D2/Thursday. Widely
    scattered thunderstorm activity is expected by the late
    morning/afternoon along and ahead of the front. Flow at 850 mb will
    be strongest from the mid Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley.
    Sufficient instability will extend far enough northward to the Great
    Lakes region to support a risk for damaging wind. Across the lower
    Mississippi Valley, flow will be weaker but thunderstorms are
    expected to re-develop by the afternoon. Given steep lapse rates,
    sufficient shear, and moderate CAPE, the potential for damaging
    winds will be possible.

    Across central Texas, forcing for ascent will be weaker but a few
    supercells may develop near the dryline. Guidance indicates the
    dryline may surge eastward by the late afternoon. Though the flow is
    weak, around 25-30 kts of deep layer flow across the dryline should
    be sufficient to organize storms. The air mass ahead of the dryline
    will be characterized by MLCAPE around 2000-3000 J/kg and a plume of
    steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and minimal MLCIN. Supercells in
    this regime would be capable of large to very large hail.

    ...Texas Panhandle into western Oklahoma...
    Elevated thunderstorms may develop across portions of the
    Oklahoma/Texas Panhandle late in the D2/Thursday period. These would
    likely be initially elevated but would pose some risk for hail and
    damaging wind. Consensus is that this would likely consolidate into
    an MCS and move across western Oklahoma through the end of the
    period, with the damaging wind risk continuing through the end of
    the D2 period.

    ..Thornton/Bentley.. 04/30/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Apr 30 17:27:48 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 301727
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 301726

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1226 PM CDT Wed Apr 30 2025

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE LOWER
    GREAT LAKES REGION SOUTHWESTWARD TO CENTRAL TEXAS...AND ACROSS PARTS
    OF NORTH TEXAS AND SOUTHERN OKLAHOMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong/locally severe thunderstorm development is expected from
    parts of the southern Plains into the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys,
    and northeastward to the Lower Great Lakes Thursday. Thunderstorms
    will pose a risk for strong to severe winds and hail.

    ...Lower Great Lakes region southwestward to Texas...
    A lead mid-level short-wave trough is forecast to sweep across the
    Midwest/Ohio Valley area Thursday, ahead of a second/stronger trough
    digging southeastward across the north-central states. This lead
    trough will support surface cyclogenesis, as a low shifts from the
    Illinois vicinity across northern Indiana and into Lower Michigan by
    evening. As this occurs, a trailing cold front is forecast to
    advance eastward across the Ohio Valley area, while trailing
    westward across central Texas to the Rio Grande Valley.

    Ahead of this front, a seasonably moist low-level airmass will heat/destabilize, supporting scattered storm development within an
    elongated zone near and ahead of the boundary.

    Greater instability will evolve across Texas and the Arklatex
    region, but weaker forcing and a weakly capped boundary layer should
    limit storm coverage. A few storms may also develop over the higher
    terrain of Mexico, and move across the lower Rio Grande Valley. Any
    storm developing across this region will prove capable of producing
    large hail, and locally strong gusts.

    Farther northeastward, from the Mid Mississippi Valley area to the
    Lower Great Lakes, lesser instability but stronger flow aloft
    suggests potential for locally damaging winds with stronger storms,
    and possibly marginal hail in a few locales. The risk across this
    area should diminish through the evening.

    ...Southern Oklahoma into North Texas...
    Evening/overnight storm development appears likely across the
    western North Texas/southwestern Oklahoma vicinity Thursday night,
    in a zone of warm advection near/north of the remnant surface front.
    Steep lapse rates and moderate westerlies aloft will combine to
    support potential for a few supercells, most likely elevated atop a shallow/stable boundary layer. Very large hail would be the primary
    risk, but particularly if storms can congeal into a quasi-linear
    MCS, locally damaging wind gusts could also be possible.

    ..Goss.. 04/30/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 1 06:00:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 010600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 010558

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1258 AM CDT Thu May 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE TRANS
    PECOS TO EAST-CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are expected from the
    Northeast, across the Ohio, Tennessee, and Lower Mississippi Valleys
    and into Texas on Friday. The greatest threat for large hail will be
    from the Trans Pecos to East Texas.

    ...Synopsis...
    A surface low will move from Ontario into northern Quebec on Friday
    with a trailing front stalling from the Great Lakes to the Ozarks to
    West Texas. This front will start to accelerate southeast during the
    late afternoon/evening as a positively tilted mid-level trough
    amplifies and moves south across the Plains. Scattered strong to
    severe storms are forecast along this frontal zone Friday
    afternoon/evening.

    ...Trans Pecos to East Texas...
    Moderate instability is forecast south of a frontal zone across
    central Texas Friday afternoon. As the mid-level trough advances
    southward through the Plains, mid-level temperatures will cool and
    ascent will overspread this frontal zone. Therefore, as the airmass
    becomes uncapped, scattered thunderstorms should develop along the
    front. 35 to 40 knots of effective shear should be sufficient for
    supercells with a primary hazard of large hail.

    ...Mid Mississippi Valley to the eastern Great Lakes...
    Scattered thunderstorms are expected along and ahead of the front
    from Louisiana to western New York on Friday afternoon. The best
    flow will be across Kentucky and Ohio and into Pennsylvania and New
    York, but heating/destabilization becomes more questionable that far
    north. The best overlap of mid-level flow and richer low-level
    moisture will be across the Mid-Mississippi Valley. However, cloud
    cover associated with an MCS which is expected to be ongoing at the
    beginning of the period across Texas and Arkansas will limit heating
    and thus destabilization. Better instability will be likely where
    heating can occur to the south of the more extensive cloud cover,
    but shear/forcing becomes weaker farther south and east. Therefore,
    within the broad marginal risk from western New York to Louisiana
    there will likely be one or more corridors with a greater threat for
    severe storms, but those areas will be mesoscale in nature and
    highly dependent on Day 1 convection. Therefore, no higher
    probabilities have been added at this time.

    ..Bentley.. 05/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 1 17:29:26 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 011729
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 011727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1227 PM CDT Thu May 01 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FRIDAY AFTERNOON
    INTO EARLY FRIDAY NIGHT FROM CENTRAL TEXAS TO MIDDLE TENNESSEE AND
    CENTRAL KENTUCKY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are expected from central
    Texas to middle Tennessee and central Kentucky Friday afternoon into
    early Friday night. Large hail and damaging winds are the main
    threats.

    ...Synopsis...
    Downstream from a ridge over the Great Basin, a shortwave trough now
    amplifying over the northern High Plains will continue southeastward
    across KS/OK/MO/AR on Friday. A separate/lead shortwave trough will
    eject quickly northeastward from the Great Lakes to the Saint
    Lawrence Valley. The lead shortwave trough will be associated with
    a weak surface cyclone across southeast QC and a trailing cold front
    into the lower Great Lakes. Farther southwest, the surface pattern
    will likely be modulated by the effects of overnight convection from
    D1 that will likely be ongoing at the start of the period from north
    TX and southern/eastern OK into western AR.

    ...Central TX to middle TN...
    Differential heating and outflow from the early convection will
    reinforce a baroclinic zone during the day from north/central TX
    into central AR. Surface heating/destabilization in advance of the
    remnant morning convection should result in re-invigoration of the
    convection by early afternoon across parts of the Mid-South and TN
    Valley, where the storm environment will favor clusters/line
    segments capable of producing occasional wind damage and large hail.


    Strong surface heating will occur south of the morning convection in
    TX where afternoon MLCAPE will likely exceed 2000 J/kg. The eastern
    extension of an EML, effective bulk shear of 30-40 kt and stronger
    flow aloft will favor a mix of supercells and multicell clusters
    capable of producing large hail (2 to 3 inches in diameter with the
    more persistent supercells). There will also be some increase in
    the threat for wind damage as storms consolidate into one or more
    larger clusters and continue moving southeastward toward the TX
    coast and south central TX into Friday night.

    ...Southern Appalachians to eastern NY...
    The ejecting/lead shortwave trough will provide a glancing influence
    across NY during the afternoon, where a weakly unstable warm sector
    is expected. Though buoyancy will not be particularly large (MLCAPE
    generally less than 1000 J/kg), some enhancement to midlevel flow
    (up to 40 kt) and steepened low-level lapse rates in the afternoon
    could support isolated wind damage with cell/small clusters.
    Farther south, flow aloft will be weaker, though stronger surface heating/larger buoyancy will compensate. Storm coverage is expected
    to remain widely scattered (more probable closer to the higher
    terrain/Blue Ridge), but thermodynamic profiles will favor
    sufficiently strong downdrafts for isolated wind damage.

    ..Thompson.. 05/01/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 2 05:55:03 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 020552
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 020551

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1251 AM CDT Fri May 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS MAINLY SATURDAY AFTERNOON/EVENING FROM THE SOUTHEAST INTO THE MID-ATLANTIC AND
    SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe storms are possible on Saturday from the
    Southeast to southern New England and across deep South Texas.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level low will become closed across the Midwest on Saturday
    with an associated surface low traversing along the Ohio River. A
    cold front will extend southwest from this surface low to South
    Texas Saturday morning with the cold front crossing the Appalachians
    by Saturday evening.

    ...Mid-Atlantic to the Southeast...
    A broad warm sector featuring low to mid 60s dewpoints will be in
    place ahead of the aforementioned cold front on Saturday morning.
    Convection will likely be ongoing along this front at the beginning
    of the period. This convection and associated cloud cover will
    likely inhibit destabilization ahead of the front with only weak
    instability forecast. Flow will be sufficient for some clusters or
    organized bowing segments, but the limited instability will probably
    limit a greater threat.

    Less cloudcover and greater destabilization is likely east of the
    Appalachians which could lead to a locally greater severe weather
    threat. Forecast soundings show around 35 to 45 knots of deep layer
    shear which could result in some organized storms. However, this
    threat should be short-lived as inhibition increases substantially
    after sunset.

    ...Deep South Texas...
    The majority of guidance shows the cold front/composite outflow in
    the Gulf/northern Mexico by 12Z Saturday, but some guidance (Hires
    NAM and somewhat the NSSL-WRF) shows a less progressive/slower
    southward movement of the boundary. Therefore, while a marginal
    severe weather risk appears less likely across Deep South Texas on
    Day 2/Saturday, the threat will be maintained for now since some
    guidance indicates the threat could exist and only slight timing
    differences from other guidance could result in some threat early on
    Day 2.

    ..Bentley.. 05/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 2 17:29:35 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 021729
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 021728

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 PM CDT Fri May 02 2025

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PORTIONS OF
    THE CAROLINAS INTO SOUTHEAST PENNSYLVANIA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe storms are possible on Saturday from the
    Southeast to southern New England and across deep South Texas.

    ...Synopsis...

    A positive-tilt mid/upper trough from the Great Lakes to East Texas
    will shift east over the MS Valley as an upper cyclone develops over
    IL/MO by early afternoon. The upper cyclone should progress eastward
    over the Lower OH/TN Valley vicinity by the end of the period. Ahead
    of this system, a broad swath of modest southwesterly flow aloft
    will overspread much of the Eastern Seaboard. At the surface, weak
    cyclogenesis is forecast over the Ohio Valley. Meanwhile, a cold
    front will move across the Northeast, the central Appalachians, and
    much of the Southeast through Sunday morning.

    Further west, an upper trough will develop inland across the West. A
    belt of enhanced southerly mid/upper flow is expected to overspread
    portions of the Great Basin and the northern Rockies as this occurs.
    At the surface, a cold front will move eastward across the northern
    Great Basin.

    ...Southeast to Northeast U.S....

    Southerly low-level flow will transport modest boundary layer
    moisture northward ahead of the aforementioned cold front and
    surface low. Dewpoints will generally range from the upper 60s to
    low 60s F, though a corridor of mid-60s F dewpoints may occur from
    the Southeast into the central Appalachians. Convection will likely
    be ongoing across portions of MS/AL into the Lower OH Valley
    Saturday morning. Some of this activity across the Southeast could
    pose a risk for strong gusts. Additional convection is expected to
    develop during the afternoon ahead of the advancing cold front
    within a modestly destabilizing airmass (MLCAPE to around 1000
    J/kg). Overall, vertical shear profiles are forecast to remain
    modest, with less than 25-30 kt effective shear magnitudes. However,
    closer to the surface low and within a zone of potentially stronger differential heating from the central Appalachians to southeast PA,
    25-35 kt effective shear may support better organized/stronger
    updrafts. Isolated severe gusts and hail to 1.5 inches could occur
    with these cells within an area of steepened low-level lapse rates
    and moderate shear. An upgrade to Slight (level 2 of 5) has been
    included with this outlook update.

    The severe risk across the broader region will be tempered by modest shear/instability, though isolated strong gusts or hail may occur
    with any stronger cells. Additionally, with eastward extent into the
    Piedmont and Mid-Atlantic coastal areas, inhibition will increase
    during the evening as storms move into these areas, further limiting
    severe potential.

    ...NV into OR/ID...

    Scattered thunderstorms are expected during the afternoon amid
    increasing large-scale ascent and steepening mid and low-level lapse
    rates. Cool temperatures aloft will support steep midlevel lapse
    rates greater than 7-7.5 C/km, fostering up to 500 J/kg MLCAPE.
    Midlevel flow around 30-45 kt atop steep low-level lapse rates and a
    well-mixed boundary layer suggest some stronger outflow winds will
    be possible with the convection and a Marginal (level 1 of 5) risk
    has been included.

    ...South TX...

    Strong storms may be ongoing at the beginning of the period as the
    southwest extent of the aforementioned cold front overlies far South
    TX. Strong gusts could occur with this activity for a few hours in
    the morning before the boundary pushes south.

    ..Leitman.. 05/02/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 3 05:48:09 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 030547
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 030546

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1246 AM CDT Sat May 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FLORIDA
    EAST COAST INTO SOUTHERN PENNSYLVANIA...AND ACROSS EASTERN NEW
    MEXICO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible along the
    Florida east coast into the North Carolina/Virginia Piedmont and
    southwestern Pennsylvania. Additional severe thunderstorms are
    possible across eastern New Mexico.

    ...Synopsis...
    The upper-level pattern will feature two cutoff lows, one in the
    lower/mid Ohio Valley and another that will develop near the lower
    Colorado Valley. A surface low in the central/northern Appalachians
    will slowly fill during the day. A cold front will slowly progress
    eastward through parts of the Southeast into the Blue
    Ridge/Piedmont. In New Mexico, weak moisture return and upslope flow
    will occur in the southern Rockies.

    ...Florida...
    With the front pushing into portions of the northern Gulf, weak warm
    air advection and mid-level ascent on the southern periphery of the
    upper low may promote showers/thunderstorms into the eastern Gulf
    and perhaps the western Florida Peninsula. This activity plus cloud
    cover associated with the subtropical jet will impact the degree of destabilization that occurs in some areas. Still, the pattern favors thunderstorm along the eastern sea breeze boundary during the
    afternoon. 1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE along with 25-30 kts effective
    shear across the sea breeze will promote supercells. Temperatures
    aloft are expected to be -12 to -14 C. Large hail and damaging winds
    would be possible with the strongest storms. A tornado would be
    possible with a supercell favorably interacting with the sea breeze
    boundary. Additional storms are possible along the front in the
    eastern Florida Panhandle/North Florida. Shear will be stronger
    closer to the upper low, but convergence is not overly strong along
    the front. Storm development will depend on local areas of stronger heating/convergence.

    ...Georgia into Piedmont/Blue Ridge and upper Ohio Valley
    Vicinity...
    Precipitation will likely be ongoing for most of these areas early
    Sunday morning. With at least low 60s F dewpoints extending into
    much of the Mid-Atlantic, destabilization is expected behind the
    morning activity. Confidence in sufficient destabilization is
    greatest from eastern Georgia into the Carolinas as the
    precipitation should move out sooner. Potentially lingering
    precipitation and cloud cover cast more uncertainty on the severe
    potential for the Mid-Atlantic into the upper Ohio Valley region.
    500-1000 J/kg MLCAPE appears possible during the afternoon.
    Effective shear of 35-40 kts will promote a few marginally organized
    cells capable of marginally severe hail and isolated damaging winds.

    ...New Mexico...
    With the cold front having moved into the northern Gulf, moisture
    return along the western flank of the surface high will be weak. Mid
    to upper 40s F dewpoints can be reasonably expected. However,
    temperatures of -14 to -16 C at 500 mb will allow weak buoyancy to
    develop. Mid-level ascent from subtle shortwaves and upslope flow
    will promote widely scattered to scattered storms in the southern
    Rockies. A belt of stronger mid-level winds will promote at least
    modest storm organization despite limited buoyancy. Small to
    marginally severe hail and isolated strong winds would be possible
    with this activity.

    ..Wendt.. 05/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 3 17:23:15 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 031723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 031721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1221 PM CDT Sat May 03 2025

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE FLORIDA
    EAST COAST INTO SOUTHWEST PENNSYLVANIA...AND ACROSS EASTERN NEW
    MEXICO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible along the
    Florida east coast into the North Carolina/Virginia Piedmont and
    southwestern Pennsylvania. Additional severe thunderstorms are
    possible across eastern New Mexico.

    ...Synopsis...

    A mid/upper cyclone will remain positioned over the OH/TN Valley
    vicinity on Sunday. This will maintain a belt of enhanced mid/upper
    south to southwesterly flow from FL to the Upper OH Valley. Further
    west, a large-scale upper trough will develop eastward across the
    western states, while an upper low develops within the southern
    branch of this system across the Southwest. As this occurs,
    strengthening mid/upper south/southwesterly flow will overspread the
    southern Rockies and adjacent High Plains.

    At the surface, a weak low is expected across WV with a cold front
    extending south across the VA/NC Piedmont and the SC/GA coastal
    vicinity before arcing southwest across north FL and the eastern
    Gulf. Additionally, a sea breeze is expected to develop during the
    late morning into afternoon along the FL east coast. Modest boundary
    layer moisture from the upper 50s to mid 60s F (higher dewpoints
    with southward extent) will be in place ahead of the front. Across
    the southern Rockies/High Plains vicinity, lee troughing will
    modestly strengthen during the afternoon/evening. Richer moisture
    will remain well to the south, but dewpoints in the upper 40s to low
    50s F are forecast.

    ...Florida...

    Cool temperatures aloft (-12 to -14 C at 500 mb) will support steep
    midlevel lapse rates near 7 C/km. Strong heating and low to mid 60s
    F dewpoints beneath steep midlevel lapse rates will foster moderate instability, with MLCAPE values topping out near 2000 J/kg. While
    deep-layer flow will remain modest, effective shear near 25 kt and
    vertically veering profiles will support at least transient storm
    organization. Low-level convergence along the sea breeze and the
    moderately unstable airmass should support isolated to scattered
    robust updrafts. The strongest storms could produce marginally
    severe hail and severe/damaging gusts. While low-level shear will
    remain weak, sufficient moisture and 0-3 km MLCAPE amid small but
    curved low-level hodographs suggests a brief tornado or two could
    develop on the sea breeze boundary. Uncertainty regarding storm
    coverage and longevity of strong updrafts precludes higher severe
    probabilities at this time.

    ...Coastal GA/SC to southwest PA...

    A modestly destabilizing airmass ahead of the surface cold front and
    within the warm conveyor ahead of the upper low should support
    thunderstorm development during the afternoon. Low-level flow will
    remain light, but increase with height to around 50 kt at 500 mb,
    supporting 25-35 kt effective shear across the region, and leading
    to elongated/straight hodographs. Meanwhile, cool temperatures aloft
    (-14 to -18 C at 500 mb) will support midlevel lapse rates of 6.5-7
    C/km. Isolated to scattered thunderstorms may produce marginally
    severe hail and gusty winds through early evening.

    ...New Mexico...

    Despite meager boundary layer moisture, cool temperatures aloft will
    support steep midlevel lapse rates and modest destabilization during
    the afternoon/evening. Shortwave impulses ejecting through
    increasing south/southwesterly mid/upper flow ahead of the Southwest
    upper trough/low, and low-level upslope flow will allow for
    scattered thunderstorm development by late afternoon into the
    afternoon. Strong vertical shear should support at least a few
    organized cells despite modest instability, and isolated hail and
    strong gusts will be possible.

    ..Leitman.. 05/03/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun May 4 05:53:19 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 040551
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 040549

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1249 AM CDT Sun May 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PORTIONS OF
    WESTERN AND CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible from the southern High Plains into
    parts of central Texas Monday afternoon and evening. Large to very
    large hail and severe winds are the primary threats. Additional
    strong to severe storms are possible along the eastern Florida coast
    and from northeast North Carolina to the Lake Erie vicinity.

    ...Synopsis...
    Two upper-level lows, one in the Ohio Valley and the other in the
    Southwest, will make slow eastward progress on Monday. A cold front
    from the Upper Ohio Valley southward into the Mid-Atlantic and
    central Florida will be a focus for convection during the afternoon.
    In the southern High Plains, a surface trough/dryline will form and
    promote afternoon thunderstorms as greater moisture moves westward
    into the region.

    ...Southern High Plains into Central Texas...
    As the upper low advances toward the region late Sunday into Monday,
    some convection is possible from northeast New Mexico into the Texas
    Panhandle and western Oklahoma. Low cloud cover is also expected
    along with the moisture returning northwest across Texas into
    eastern New Mexico. While these will be complicating factors in the
    forecast, the approach of the upper low and embedded perturbations
    will encourage the development of a dryline from far eastern New
    Mexico into the Trans-Pecos. Strong heating along this dryline,
    where upper 50s to mid 60s dewpoints will reside, will drive storm
    development during the afternoon. Hodographs will initially be
    rather straight. Splitting supercells capable of large/very-large
    hail and severe winds are probable. During the early evening, the
    low-level jet will strengthen. Moisture return will increase and
    low-level hodographs will become larger. A zone of greater tornado
    potential is evident from southern portions of the South Plains into
    the northern Permian Basin, particularly for supercells lasting into
    the early evening.

    The evolution of convection becomes a bit more uncertain into the
    later evening. The ramp up in the low-level jet should eventually
    promote upscale growth into a cluster/MCS. This activity could
    persist into parts of central Texas. Model guidance continues to
    differ on the placement of this feature. The exact track will depend
    largely on how far north the greater moisture is able to advect.
    Severe winds would be the primary threat with these storms, though
    low-level shear would also support some tornado risk even with a
    linear mode. During the overnight and into Tuesday morning, the
    greatest mid-level height falls will occur in the southern High
    Plains. An additional cluster/MCS on the retreating dryline. How
    severe this activity will be is unclear given the time of day and
    the preceding convection.

    ...Florida...
    With cold temperatures aloft (-10 to -12 C) remaining over the
    Peninsula and stronger surface heating expected to occur, a few
    strong to severe storms will again be possible along the eastern sea
    breeze boundary. 1500-2000 J/kg MLCAPE and 25-35 kts of effective
    shear (stronger to the north) will promote supercell structures
    capable of large hail and damaging winds. A brief tornado would be
    possible with storms that interact favorably with the sea breeze
    boundary.

    ...Mid-Atlantic into Upper Ohio Valley...
    While some precipitation and cloud cover may occur early Monday
    morning, models continue to show agreement that pockets of surface
    heating will promote around 1000 J/kg by the afternoon. Enhanced
    mid-level winds around the Ohio Valley upper low will foster 40-45
    kts of effective shear. Isolated large hail and strong/damaging
    winds will be possible with the strongest storms.

    ..Wendt.. 05/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun May 4 17:17:24 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 041717
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 041715

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1215 PM CDT Sun May 04 2025

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS FAR
    SOUTHEAST NEW MEXICO INTO SOUTHWEST TEXAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected from the southern High Plains into
    parts of central Texas Monday afternoon and evening. Scattered large
    to very large hail and severe winds are the primary threats, though
    a couple of tornadoes also are possible. Additional strong to severe
    storms are possible along the eastern Florida coast and from
    northeast North Carolina to the Lake Erie vicinity.

    ...Synopsis...

    A pair of upper cyclones, one over the Ohio Valley and the other
    across the Southwest, will pivot east on Monday. These systems will
    support a belt of enhanced mid/upper flow across the southern
    Rockies/High Plains and the Mid-Atlantic/Lower Great Lakes. At the
    surface, a cold front will stretch from the Mid-Atlantic
    south/southwest into north-central FL. Meanwhile, a dryline is
    forecast to develop across eastern NM and southwest TX, while a warm
    front lifts slowly northward across northwest and central TX. These
    features will focus potential for severe thunderstorms Monday
    afternoon into the evening/overnight.

    ...Southeast NM into Central TX...

    Southeasterly low-level flow will transport 60s F dewpoints
    northwest toward southeast NM into the Trans-Pecos vicinity ahead of
    a sharpening dryline. Strong heating along/just behind the dryline
    will foster moderate diurnal destabilization as deep-layer flow
    strengthens. Forecast hodographs initially will be
    elongated/straight through the afternoon and early evening.
    Splitting supercells produce large/very large hail are expected with
    initial convection. Furthermore, steep low-level lapse rates where
    stronger heating occurs also could support strong/severe gusts.

    During the evening, a low-level jet will increase, resulting in
    enlarged/curved low-level hodographs. Additional rounds of
    supercells may develop as the dryline begins to retreat and stronger
    ascent overspreads the region. This activity will continue to pose a significant hail risk with an increasing risk for a couple of
    tornadoes. As the upper low draws closer to the southern Rockies
    during the nighttime hours, weak cyclogenesis may occur over far
    southwest TX. Additional thunderstorm clusters, possibly growing
    upscale into an MCS propagating along the higher theta-e gradient
    across west-central to central TX is possible. It is uncertain how
    intense this convection may become given multiple rounds of
    convection across parts of the area earlier in the day, but some
    risk for damaging gusts and a tornado or two will persist.

    ...OK/TX Panhandle into Northeast NM/southeast CO...

    With northward extent across the southern High Plains, northward
    moisture return will remain muted, with dewpoints generally in the
    40s to low 50s F forecast. Nevertheless, cooling aloft will support
    steepening midlevel lapse rates amid strengthening vertical shear.
    Isolated large hail and gusty winds may accompany thunderstorm
    activity north of the effective warm front in an upslope flow
    regime.

    ...Mid-Atlantic to Lower Great Lakes...

    Pockets of heating into the afternoon amid mid 50s to low 60s F
    dewpoints, and cold temperatures aloft will support modest
    destabilization (up to 1000 J/kg MLCAPE) across the region. Enhanced
    midlevel flow will support effective shear values to around 35-45
    kt. This should support isolated organized updrafts, with stronger
    cells having potential for large hail and locally strong gusts
    during the afternoon and early evening.

    ...FL...

    A surface cold front will sag south through the period. Furthermore,
    an east coast sea breeze developing ahead of the cold front appears
    probable. Strong heating amid mid 60s F dewpoints will aid in
    moderate destabilization (MLCAPE up to 2000 J/kg). Cool temperatures
    aloft (-10 to -12 C at 500 mb) will support midlevel lapse rates
    near 7 C/km. While deep-layer flow will be somewhat weak through 700
    mb, vertically veering wind profiles will support around 30 kt
    effective shear. Elongated/straight hodographs in conjunction with a
    favorable thermodynamic environment suggests isolated hail will be
    possible. Steep low-level lapse rates also will support strong
    gusts.

    ..Leitman.. 05/04/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon May 5 06:01:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 050600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 050559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Mon May 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM CENTRAL TEXAS
    INTO THE SABINE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible from portions of the southern
    Plains into the lower Mississippi Valley on Tuesday. Severe winds,
    large to very large hail, and a few tornadoes are possible.
    Additional isolated strong to severe storms capable of large hail
    and isolated wind damage are possible within parts of the northern
    Mid-Atlantic states.

    ...Synopsis...
    With the blocking pattern still in place, the upper lows in the Ohio
    Valley and Southwest will continue to make slow progress on Tuesday.
    A shortwave trough on the base of the upper low is expected to eject
    into the southern Plains. This will promote severe potential across
    much of the region into the Lower Mississippi Valley. Rich moisture
    will continue to push into much of Texas and a warm front will lift
    to near the Red River.

    ...Central/East Texas into Western Louisiana...
    A complicated forecast exists across these regions. Convection is
    anticipated to develop in West Texas along a retreating dryline late
    on Day 1/Monday. Models are in general agreement that some of this
    activity will persist into Tuesday morning in central Texas. A very
    moist airmass (mid 60s to low 70s F dewpoints) will be advecting northward/westward ahead of this activity. There is some potential
    for this activity to remain slightly elevated given the early
    morning timing and some overnight boundary layer cooling. However,
    high theta-e advection will also mitigate inhibition. Though this
    uncertainty remains, the Slight risk has been moved farther westward
    in central Texas to account for potential near-surface/surface based
    storms early on Tuesday. Additional early morning activity is
    expected along the northward lifting warm front as the shortwave
    trough ejects into the southern Plains and the low-level jet
    impinges on the boundary.

    How this morning activity evolves will greatly impact the potential
    for higher-end severe storms in the afternoon and what the greatest
    severe hazard will be. The very moist airmass and steep mid-level
    lapse rates will promote a zone of 2500-3500 J/kg MLCAPE in parts of Central/East Texas south of the warm front. With greater than 50 kts
    of effective shear, all severe hazards would be possible regardless
    of the ultimate evolution of the convection. That being said, there
    appears to be a corridor of conditionally higher severe potential
    near and just south of the warm front in Northeast Texas into
    northwest Louisiana. Should a more organized cluster/MCS persist
    through Monday night into Tuesday morning, there is greater
    potential for a swath of severe wind gusts as the airmass
    destabilizes ahead of it. Without the MCS, there is greater
    potential for storms developing along the warm front to produce
    tornadoes (perhaps strong) as the strong low-level jet and fringe of
    the steeper lapse rates will overlap.

    Given the weakly capped boundary layer even early in the day, there
    is reasonable confidence in numerous storms, particularly along the
    warm front. With large amounts of storm interference possible, on
    top of potential MCS, confidence is not high enough to increase
    tornado probabilities. Concerning the MCS and greater severe wind
    potential, models vary greatly on the placement of this feature.
    Similarly, confidence is too low for higher wind probabilities as
    well. Overall, scattered to numerous storms along the warm front and
    dryline in central Texas will be capable of all severe hazards. Very
    large hail is most likely along the dryline or with storms that
    develop along the southern edge of any MCS.

    ...Red River Vicinity...
    Storms near the Red River and northward are more likely to be
    elevated. Large hail and perhaps isolated damaging gusts could
    occur. There is some tornado potential south of the Red River into
    North Texas where storms will be at least near-surface based.

    ...Texas Panhandle...
    With the upper-level low moving into parts of the Panhandle and weak
    surface low in the South Plains, there is potential for moisture to
    remain along a surface boundary. Several models show low 50s F
    dewpoints in the region. The question will be how much surface
    heating occurs. Should sufficient buoyancy develop, cold
    temperatures aloft will promote potential for marginally severe hail
    and isolated severe gusts in the strongest storms.

    ...Northern Mid-Atlantic...
    With the Upper Ohio Valley cyclone moving slowly northeast, there
    will be potential for another round of convection to develop near
    the core of the upper low where greater surface heating occurs.
    Marginally severe hail and isolated wind damage will be possible
    with storms during the afternoon.

    ...South Texas...
    Forcing for ascent will be somewhat weak during the afternoon and
    storm development is not certain. Some model guidance suggests that
    storms could form during the overnight near the Rio Grande Valley as
    a shortwave impulse moves over South Texas and adjacent Mexico.
    Large hail and severe winds would be possible with any supercells
    that can develop.

    ..Wendt.. 05/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon May 5 17:30:47 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 051729
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 051728

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 PM CDT Mon May 05 2025

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHWEST
    TEXAS...AND CENTRAL TEXAS INTO THE SABINE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible from portions of the southern
    Plains into the lower Mississippi Valley on Tuesday. Severe winds,
    large to very large hail, and a few tornadoes are possible.
    Additional isolated strong to severe storms capable of large hail
    and isolated wind damage are possible within parts of the northern
    Mid-Atlantic states.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level blocking pattern will start to break down during the day
    2 period with the mid-level low in the Southwest and the Ohio Valley
    starting to advance east-northeast. A weak surface low will linger
    near the eastern Great Lakes through the period on Tuesday. Broad
    low pressure will persist across Texas with a sharpening dryline
    during the afternoon across central Texas and a warm front extending
    from northeast Texas into northern Louisiana and southern
    Mississippi.

    ...Mid Atlantic to Northeast...
    Upper 50s to near 60s dewpoints will advect north across parts of
    the Mid-Atlantic and into the Northeast on Tuesday. This, combined
    with some surface heating and cool temperatures aloft beneath the
    upper low, should support weak to moderate instability. Scattered
    strong to severe storms are expected during the afternoon/early
    evening with a threat for large hail and damaging wind gusts.

    ...Central/Eastern Texas into LA and southern MS...
    A cluster of supercells or MCS will likely be ongoing at the
    beginning of the period across central Texas. This will continue to
    pose a threat for large hail and severe wind gusts through the
    morning as it moves along a warm front in the region. As the warm
    front continues to advect inland, destabilization will occur ahead
    of this ongoing convection. This will likely result in additional
    development along the warm front and also on the southern end of the
    ongoing activity. Strong shear will support supercells capable of
    large hail and severe wind gusts. In addition, a few tornadoes are
    possible with any supercells which can remain rooted within the warm
    sector.

    In the wake of the morning activity in central Texas, surface
    heating is expected along the dryline in central Texas during the
    afternoon. It is unclear whether substantial recovery will occur for
    additional supercell development in this region during the
    afternoon/evening, but if supercells develop they will pose a threat
    for large to very large hail and severe wind gusts.

    ...Northwest Texas Vicinity...
    As morning convection/cloud cover clears out to the northeast,
    substantial heating may occur beneath the upper low for some
    low-topped supercell development along an occluded front which will
    extend from central Texas into northwest Texas. These storms will be
    capable of large hail and perhaps a brief tornado.

    ...South Texas...
    Isolated supercells are possible along the dryline Tuesday
    afternoon/evening. Extreme instability and very strong shear will
    support supercells capable of very large hail with any sustained
    supercells that form. However, only weak height falls during the
    afternoon and limited convergence along the dryline, as low-level
    flow veers across the warm sector, should keep supercells
    development isolated. The HRRR has more robust convective
    development with storms off higher terrain in northern Mexico and
    additional development in South Texas. Should this occur, higher
    hail/wind probabilities would be necessary given the environment.
    However, forcing does not support this scenario with height rises
    across South Texas and a low-level jet focused across
    Louisiana/southern Mississippi.

    ..Bentley.. 05/05/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue May 6 05:54:51 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 060554
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 060552

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1252 AM CDT Tue May 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM SOUTH TEXAS
    TO THE UPPER TEXAS COAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe storms are possible from the South Texas into the
    Upper Texas Coast on Wednesday. Large hail and strong to severe
    winds are the main hazards.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level shortwave trough will move into the Mid-South and weaken
    on Wednesday. The upper-level low will remain within parts of the central/southern Plains. While low-level moisture will remain high
    across parts of Texas, a nebulous surface pattern will limit the
    potential for focused/organized severe weather. A stalled surface boundary/outflow will be the primary zone of concern during the
    afternoon.

    ...South Texas into Upper Texas Coast...
    A stalled boundary is expected from South Texas northeastward
    towards the Sabine Valley. Convergence along this boundary will be
    weak and mid-level height tendencies will be neutral, but strong
    surface heating and perhaps subtle mid-level ascent could promote
    isolated storms along this boundary. Strong buoyancy and over 50 kts
    of effective shear will support a risk for large hail and strong to
    severe winds. Discrete storms are possible initially, but shear
    mostly parallel to the surface boundary suggests storm interactions
    would be probable. This, along with rather modest mid-level lapse
    rates should keep the potential for very-large hail low.

    ...Oklahoma...
    With the upper-level low moving into Oklahoma and Kansas by the
    afternoon. Cold temperatures aloft will support some convective
    development within a very weak surface reflection/convergence
    beneath the upper low. Dewpoints will not be overly high for this
    time of year (mid/upper 50s F). While models have generally trended
    a bit stronger with the feature, the greatest mid-level winds will
    be displaced farther to the south from where the highest confidence
    in convective development is (northern into perhaps parts of central
    Oklahoma). There will be a zone in south-central into southeast
    Oklahoma that could support a stronger storm, but this threat is
    rather conditional.

    ...Central into East Texas...
    East of the I-35 corridor, upper mid/upper 60s F dewpoints are
    possible in the wake of convection Tuesday night into Wednesday
    morning. Given the weakening upper-level system, the surface pattern
    will be quite diffuse/disorganized. Sufficient shear and buoyancy
    will exist for strong to severe storms, but storm development is
    highly uncertain/conditional. Mid-level ascent will be weak as
    height tendencies will be neutral. Other than a mesoscale zone of
    convergence or perhaps an outflow boundary from convection near the
    Gulf Coast, low-level forcing will also be weak.

    ..Wendt.. 05/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue May 6 17:28:42 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 061728
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 061726

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1226 PM CDT Tue May 06 2025

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN PARTS OF SOUTH
    TX...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible across the southern Great
    Plains to coastal Louisiana on Wednesday. Large hail should be the
    main hazard, which appears most likely in parts of south Texas
    during the late afternoon to early evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    Primary mid/upper low near the KS/OK border will drift east and
    gradually dampen through the period. A minor surface wave may
    accompany this low with a dryline extending south into south-central
    TX. A broad MCS on D1 should yield large-scale convective outflow
    near the upper TX to LA coast at 12Z Wednesday.

    ...South TX to coastal LA...
    An extensive swath of convection will likely be ongoing across
    portions of the northwest to north-central Gulf Coast. Limited real
    estate may exist for morning severe, but could possibly affect
    coastal LA where a low-probability wind/tornado threat has been
    added. Afternoon to early evening thunderstorm redevelopment along
    and north of the large-scale outflow will be dependent on its
    spatial placement, as large-scale ascent wanes amid neutral
    mid-level height change. A few supercells seem most probable where
    the boundary intersects with the south-central TX dryline. Ample
    buoyancy to the south of the outflow, along with strong effective
    shear north of it, should yield a corridor of large hail threat
    initially. Mid/upper flow tending to orient along the boundary will
    support some clustering into the evening. This should limit coverage
    of very large hail potential, with a mixed isolated severe hail/wind
    threat across the coastal plain.

    ...Central/eastern OK into north TX...
    Despite a fairly weak surface reflection and attendant convergence,
    12Z CAM guidance is consistent with scattered storms developing
    southeast of the mid/upper low in OK, and isolated storms into north
    TX along the dryline. Guidance more broadly varies with degree of destabilization/residual boundary-layer moisture in the wake of
    extensive convective overturning on D1. Still, with steep mid-level
    lapse rates accompanying the low and greater boundary-layer heating
    in its vicinity tomorrow compared to today, a threat for at least
    isolated severe hail and localized strong gusts is apparent. For
    now, have upgraded to a level 1/MRGL hail-driven risk.

    ..Grams.. 05/06/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 7 05:59:05 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 070558
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 070556

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1256 AM CDT Wed May 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER A BROAD
    PORTION OF THE SOUTHERN AND EASTERN CONUS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms with large hail and damaging winds are
    possible, mainly Thursday afternoon and evening, from southern Texas
    across the Southeast and into the Lower Mid-Atlantic States.

    ...Synopsis...
    An elongated trough from the Northeast into the Southwest will shift
    eastward on Thursday. Areas of moderate mid-level winds will support
    some potential for strong to severe storms across a very broad
    region from the Trans-Pecos into the Mid-South/Southeast and the
    southern Mid-Atlantic. As the trough will be highly positively
    tilted, the surface pattern will be rather nebulous and mid-level
    ascent will be weak. A weak surface boundary is expected from parts
    of the southern Plains into the Mid Atlantic. Outlook refinement is
    possible as greater details of potential mesoscale severe risk
    corridors become more evident.

    ...Mid-South...
    A weak surface front may help to focus convective development during
    the afternoon. Given the orientation of the upper trough, mid-level
    ascent will be rather weak. Still, temperatures will be cold aloft
    and shear on the southern periphery of the weak upper low will be
    sufficient for isolated organized cells capable of large hail and
    damaging winds. Storm coverage and timing remain a bit uncertain as
    some cloud cover (some with the upper low and other influence from
    convection farther south) could hinder surface heating. These
    uncertainties preclude higher hail probabilities.

    ...Trans-Pecos into Rio Grande Valley...
    A modest shortwave trough in northern Mexico will slide eastward
    into the Trans-Pecos by early afternoon. Storms are expected to
    initiate within the Davis Mountains and move southeastward into low
    60s F dewpoints. Temperatures aloft will not be overly cold, but
    1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE can be expected as the storms move into richer
    moisture. It is possible that this activity grows upscale and moves
    along the Rio Grande Valley into South Texas late evening into early
    Friday morning. Given the timing of this activity, some boundary
    layer cooling will have occurred and marginally warmer air aloft in
    forecast soundings may limit a more organized severe threat.

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic...
    Modest mid-level forcing should promote convection along the
    Appalachians/Blue Ridge. A well-mixed boundary layer with 500-1000
    J/kg MLCAPE and 35-40 kts of effective shear will allow for a few
    organized storms during the afternoon. Damaging winds and isolated
    marginally severe hail may occur.

    ...Southern Atlantic Coast...
    Though models differ on the placement of the stronger core of
    mid-level winds, sufficient westerly flow aloft is probable for a
    few organized storms along the sea breeze boundary. Temperatures
    should remain cold enough aloft to support a large hail threat.
    Damaging winds are also possible.

    ..Wendt.. 05/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 7 17:30:57 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 071730
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 071729

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1229 PM CDT Wed May 07 2025

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER THE SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND RIO GRANDE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered damaging winds and severe hail are possible over the
    southern Appalachians on Thursday afternoon to early evening. A
    swath of large hail and severe wind is possible along the Rio Grande
    Valley from mid-afternoon to evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    An elongated, positive-tilt mid/upper trough from southeast Canada
    to the Rio Grande will slowly progress east on Thursday. At least a
    trio of embedded shortwave impulses will aid in corridors of modest
    large-scale ascent, amid a pervasive swath of 35-50 kt 500-mb west-southwesterlies across the South into the East. Given the
    highly positive-tilt orientation of the trough, attendant surface
    reflections will remain weak. A minor surface wave over the
    Mid-South should decay by early evening, while a separate low drifts
    northeast from the lee of the southern Appalachians to VA.

    ...Mid-South to southern Appalachians...
    Multiple corridors of scattered thunderstorm development are
    expected by Thursday afternoon, ahead of a shortwave impulse
    drifting from the Ozarks across a portion of the Mid-South.
    Lingering activity/cloud cover during the morning will serve as the
    northern limiter to severe potential, along with weaker deep-layer
    shear closer to the trough. The most likely zone for a scattered
    severe hail and damaging wind threat appears to be across the
    southern Appalachians vicinity where MLCAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg and
    30-40 kt effective bulk shear are anticipated. Here, a few
    supercells may congeal into an organized cluster or two. Farther
    west, lesser values of instability and shear should yield a more isolated/marginal severe threat.

    ...TX Rio Grande Valley...
    A low-amplitude shortwave impulse should progress from northern
    Chihuahua along the Rio Grande. Numerous thunderstorms are expected
    ahead of the impulse across the southern Trans-Pecos/Big Bend by
    mid-afternoon and adjacent Coahuila. Uncertainty increases with how
    this activity will evolve downstream Thursday evening, potentially
    remaining primarily across northeast Mexico or growing upscale
    across the Lower Rio Grande Valley into Deep South TX as it impinges
    on richer low-level moisture. With low-level northeasterlies beneath mid/upper-level west-southwesterlies, an elongated/nearly
    straight-line hodograph is expected. This should foster splitting
    supercell structures, which could congeal into a cluster/small MCS.
    The primary limiting factor to more robust intensity will be a lack
    of steep mid-level lapse rates amid weak warm advection. Still,
    enough signal exists to warrant a level 2/SLGT risk.

    ...Southern Mid-Atlantic...
    Modest mid-level forcing for ascent should promote isolated to
    scattered thunderstorms developing off the central Appalachians and
    Blue Ridge Mountains on Thursday afternoon. A well-mixed boundary
    layer with weak MLCAPE and moderate effective shear will allow for a
    few transient/weakly organized cells during the afternoon. This
    could promote small hail amid weak mid-level lapse rates and support
    a primary threat of localized damaging winds.

    ...Southern Atlantic Coast...
    Sufficient mid-level westerlies are expected to support a few weakly
    organized storms along the sea breeze boundary on Thursday
    afternoon. Mid-level temperatures should remain cold enough to
    support an isolated severe hail threat. A warm/moist boundary layer
    will also foster isolated strong to severe gusts.

    ..Grams.. 05/07/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 8 05:53:53 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 080550
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 080549

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1249 AM CDT Thu May 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHEAST INTO THE SOUTHERN MID-ATLANTIC...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms, capable of damaging winds along with
    some hail, are possible across the Southeast States and southern
    Mid-Atlantic, mainly on Friday afternoon to early evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    A stronger upper-level trough in the Northeast will shear apart the
    elongated trough structure that has been present for the last few
    days in the East. A cutoff low will develop in the lower Mississippi
    Valley region. A diffuse surface cold front will be the primary
    focus for convection along with additional potential along the
    Gulf/Atlantic sea breeze boundaries in Florida. A belt of stronger
    mid-level winds near the Gulf/Atlantic coasts will promote modest
    storm organization.

    ...Southeast Virginia into North Carolina...
    Mid-level ascent will be greater in these areas. With a weak surface
    low and front moving through, there could be a greater concentration
    of storms than farther south. Models are consistent with at least
    modest early day precipitation occurring along with lingering cloud
    cover. Depending on afternoon destabilization, there could be a
    locally greater corridor of wind/hail potential.

    ...Southeast into eastern Florida Peninsula...
    Surface heating near a diffuse surface boundary (Atlantic sea breeze
    in Florida) will promote 1500-2000 J/kg MLCAPE by the afternoon. A
    belt of stronger mid-level winds across these areas will support at
    least isolated organized storms. Damaging winds will be possible and
    modest mid-level lapse rates will support some threat for large hail
    as well.

    ...Florida Panhandle...
    Depending on the track of an MCV within the Gulf, surface heating
    and the Gulf breeze boundary will be potential triggers for
    convection during the afternoon. Shear will be modest (25-30 kts),
    but a few stronger storms may produce damaging winds or marginally
    severe hail. Should the MCV track closer to the shore, surface
    heating would be more limited, but isolated wind damage could occur
    with any linear segments associated with the MCV.

    ..Wendt.. 05/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 8 17:13:12 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 081713
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 081711

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1211 PM CDT Thu May 08 2025

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
    THE GULF COAST STATES NORTHWARD INTO THE CAROLINAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms capable of damaging gusts and large
    hail are possible across the Southeast States.

    ...Synopsis...
    Upper troughiness will extend from the Northeast southwestward into
    TX, with upper lows in both locales. The low/trough over the Mid
    Atlantic and New England will deepen through the period, with the
    base of this wave sweeping across VA and NC. To the south, cool
    midlevel temperatures will remain over the Gulf Coast states as a
    positive tilt trough develops over the western Gulf.

    At the surface, weak low pressure will develop from the Mid Atlantic
    Coast to the eastern Carolinas, ahead of a cold front. Sufficient
    moisture will exist ahead of the front, from far southeast VA toward
    the Gulf Coast and FL, to support scattered strong and isolated
    severe daytime storms.

    ...Southeastern States...
    Although the Gulf Coast portion of the front will be weak, moderate
    instability due to strong heating should lead to scattered storms by
    late afternoon in an east-west zone from southern MS into southern
    GA. Forecast soundings depict weak shear but a steep lapse rate
    environment favorable for diurnal hail. Cold downdrafts may also
    yield localized wind damage.

    To the north, storms will increase in coverage over much of the
    Carolinas into far southeast VA. Instability may be a bit marginal
    over north parts of this region due to early development. However,
    pockets of air mass recovery will support scattered strong storms,
    aided by the upper trough influence to the north.

    Over FL, strong heating beneath cool midlevel temperatures (500 mb
    around -11 C) will result in moderate instability. Isolated storms
    are likely to develop over the interior Peninsula, with large hail
    potential. Storms should move slowly given weak flow below 500 mb,
    and as such, the threat should remain relatively localized.

    ..Jewell.. 05/08/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 9 05:23:09 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 090520
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 090518

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1218 AM CDT Fri May 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SATURDAY ACROSS
    PARTS OF CNTRL AND NORTHERN FL...SRN GA...AND WRN INTO CNTRL MT...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong thunderstorms may impact parts of northern and central
    Florida and adjacent southern Georgia on Saturday. Additional
    strong thunderstorms may impact parts of western into central
    Montana. Some of these storms may be accompanied by at least some
    risk for severe weather.

    ...Discussion...
    It appears that much of North America will remain under the
    influence of split, amplified westerlies through this period and
    beyond, with flow in the northern mid-latitudes remaining stronger
    than in the southern mid- and subtropical latitudes. Within this
    regime, a significant mid-level trough is forecast to continue
    digging offshore of the British Columbia coast toward the Pacific
    Northwest, preceded inland by a less prominent, northeastward
    accelerating perturbation into/across and east-northeast of the
    Canadian Rockies.

    Models indicate that the lead perturbation may be accompanied by
    weak cyclogenesis to the lee of the Canadian and adjacent northern
    U.S. Rockies, as it begins to progress around the western periphery
    of large-scale mid-level ridging shifting across/east of the
    Canadian Prairies, northern U.S. Great Plains and Upper Midwest.

    As the ridging overspreads the interior northern tier of the U.S.,
    it appears that a broad mid-level low, initially centered just
    inland of the north central Gulf coast, will move little or perhaps
    retrograde to the west and southwest Saturday through Saturday
    night. An associated broad, weak low-level baroclinic zone may
    remain quasi-stationary near/just offshore of the Carolina coast
    through northern Florida, to a weak surface low near/offshore of the southeastern Louisiana coast, but this remains a bit uncertain due
    to model spread.

    Higher moisture content air will generally be confined to a corridor
    focused above/to the cool side of the frontal zone, and within a
    warm sector plume extending east of the mid-level low southward
    toward the tropical latitudes.

    ...Southeast...
    In additional to the uncertain details concerning the north central
    Gulf frontal low and downstream frontal movement, spread evident in
    model output concerning the sub-synoptic developments adds
    uncertainty to the convective forecast. However, while the
    mid-level cold core remains well upstream, it does appear that much
    of northern/central Florida and adjacent portions of the Gulf States
    will remain under the influence of a broadly difluent, modest
    southwesterly mid/upper flow regime.

    Although higher moisture content and more widespread convective
    development may tend to remain focused well offshore, across the
    northeastern Gulf, the front zone and inland advancing sea-breezes
    might provide focus for widely scattered strong thunderstorm
    development during the day. Aided by modestly steep lower/mid-level
    lapse rates, the environment may become conducive for a few of these
    storms to pose a risk for severe hail and wind. Some model output
    suggests that low-level flow northeast of the surface low might
    contribute to hodographs conducive to some risk for a tornado,
    mainly across and west of the Florida Big Bend vicinity.

    ...Montana...
    There is a notable signal within model output concerning the
    potential for the initiation of thunderstorm activity across the
    higher terrain of western Montana, and the subsequent evolution of
    an upscale growing cluster into/across north central Montana
    Saturday afternoon and evening. Moisture/instability within
    thermodynamic profiles characterized by the evolution of a deep and
    well-mixed boundary is forecast to be weak. But shear/momentum
    associated with 40-50+ kt west-southwesterly mid/upper flow may
    become conducive to a few storms initially posing a risk for small
    to marginally severe hail, before strong to severe wind gusts become
    the primary potential hazard until storms weaken Saturday night.

    ..Kerr.. 05/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 9 17:21:33 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 091720
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 091719

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1219 PM CDT Fri May 09 2025

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF FLORIDA...SOUTHERN GEORGIA AND ALABAMA...AND INTO CENTRAL MONTANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Strong thunderstorms may impact parts of northern and central
    Florida and adjacent southern Georgia and Alabama on Saturday.
    Additional strong thunderstorms may impact parts of western into
    central Montana.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper cyclone will remain over the Sabine Valley, with cold air
    aloft extending from TX toward the northern Gulf Coast. At the
    surface, low pressure will move from the northern Gulf into LA/MS,
    with a stationary front over southern AL and GA. A moist and
    unstable air mass will exist south of this boundary, supporting
    bouts of thunderstorms.

    To the west, strong southwest winds aloft will spread across the
    Pacific Northwest and into ID and western MT late. Heating within a
    surface trough over western MT combined with cooling aloft may
    support scattered high based storms.

    ...FL into far southern GA/AL...
    Numerous storms are forecast over parts of the Gulf Of America and
    extending from southern AL into the FL Panhandle during the day.
    Associated outflows may be strong given the amount of convection.
    Veering winds with height in the low levels may support rotation at
    times, and a brief tornado cannot be ruled out along the stationary
    front.

    During the afternoon, strong heating will lead to storms from
    central FL into southern GA, and cool temperatures aloft may favor
    sporadic hail.

    ...West-central MT...
    Scattered fast-moving storms are forecast after about 21Z along the
    ID/MT border and spreading from western into north-central MT. While
    high based, steep lapse rates along with favorable mean winds/deep
    shear will support both strong to severe gusts and marginal hail.

    ..Jewell.. 05/09/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 10 05:05:14 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 100503
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 100502

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1202 AM CDT Sat May 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SUNDAY INTO
    SUNDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF CNTRL AND NRN FL...SRN SC...SRN
    GA......SRN/WRN AL...CNTRL/ERN MS...CNTRL/ERN MT...WRN ND...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Widely scattered strong thunderstorms may impact the eastern Gulf
    Coast states on Sunday, posing at least some risk for severe hail
    and locally strong surface gusts. Additional thunderstorms may be
    accompanied by some risk for severe hail and strong to severe wind
    gusts across parts of central and eastern Montana into western North
    Dakota late Sunday afternoon and evening.

    ...Synopsis...
    Models continue to indicate little change to the general large-scale
    pattern through this period, with much of North America remaining
    under the influence of amplified, split westerlies - stronger across
    the northern mid-latitudes than across the southern mid- and
    subtropical latitudes. Within this regime, significant mid-level
    troughing, with at least a couple of smaller-scale embedded
    perturbations, is forecast to begin digging inland of the northern
    U.S. Pacific coast. As this occurs, broad downstream ridging will
    continue slowly eastward across the interior of North America, with
    the leading edge likely as far east as the St. Lawrence Valley and
    Northeast by late Sunday night. To the south of this ridge, the
    center of a broad, initially quasi-stationary mid-level low may
    begin a very slow acceleration back to the northeast, across the
    lower Mississippi Valley, in response to the troughing digging into
    the Northwest.

    In lower levels, it appears that one initial weak low across the
    Canadian Prairies will weaken further, as surface troughing
    deepens upstream, to the lee of the Canadian and northern U.S.
    Rockies. At the same time, cool surface ridging, initially centered
    across the lower Great Lakes vicinity, is likely to redevelop
    southeastward off the northern Mid Atlantic coast. Near the
    southwestern periphery of this ridge, a broad area of lower surface
    pressure may continue developing inland of the north central Gulf
    coast, perhaps accompanied by some further boundary-layer moistening
    inland across parts of the eastern Gulf states. Seasonably high
    moisture content, though, may remain confined to a narrow plume
    southeast through south of the mid-level low, from south Carolina
    and Georgia coastal areas across the Florida Peninsula into the
    lower latitudes.

    ...Lower Mississippi Valley/eastern Gulf Coast states...
    Beneath the modest, difluent southwesterly flow, downstream of the
    mid/upper low, model forecast soundings continue to suggest that
    thermodynamic profiles could become conducive to widely scattered
    strong thunderstorms with potential to produce severe hail and
    locally strong surface gusts by Sunday afternoon. Just east of the
    broad, weak surface low centered over the lower Mississippi Valley,
    a belt of modest southerly 850 mb flow may contribute to low-level
    hodographs which may become marginally conducive to a tornado or
    two.

    ...North Rockies into adjacent Great Plains...
    Downstream of the large-scale mid/upper troughing digging into the
    Northwest, it appears that forcing for ascent in the presence of
    weak destabilization will become sufficient for at least scattered
    thunderstorm development. It appears that thermodynamic profiles,
    in the presence of strong deep-layer shear, may become conducive to
    storms with at least some potential to produce severe hail across
    the higher terrain of central Montana.

    As convection propagates northeastward off the higher terrain of
    central and southern Montana, across a more strongly heated and
    deeply mixed boundary layer, downdrafts enhanced by evaporative
    cooling/melting and downward mixing of stronger flow from aloft
    probably will contribute to a few strong to severe surface gusts.
    The latest NAM continues to suggest potential for one or two
    clusters with consolidating downdrafts and outflow, though now
    generally across parts of central/eastern Montana and, perhaps, into
    western North Dakota by late Sunday evening.

    ..Kerr.. 05/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 10 17:12:07 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 101712
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 101710

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1210 PM CDT Sat May 10 2025

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    SOUTHEAST...AND OVER PARTS OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES INTO WESTERN
    NORTH DAKOTA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong thunderstorms are expected across the Southeast on
    Sunday, posing a risk for severe hail, locally strong surface gusts,
    and a tornado or two. Additional thunderstorms may produce severe
    hail and strong to severe wind gusts across parts of the northern
    Rockies into western North Dakota.

    ...Southeast...

    A mid/upper cyclone over the Sabine River Valley will slowly meander
    eastward across the Lower MS Valley on Sunday. Moderate deep-layer
    shear on the eastern periphery of this feature will support
    organized cells and clusters across portions of the Southeast during
    the afternoon and evening. Cool temperatures aloft, closer to the
    upper cyclone center across MS/AL will support steepened midlevel
    lapse rates near 7 C/km amid elongated hodographs. This will foster
    a corridor of moderate instability (up to 1500 J/kg MLCAPE).
    Isolated to scattered cells, with perhaps a couple of supercells,
    are possible within this corridor from the western FL Panhandle into central/northern MS. Isolated strong gusts, hail and perhaps a
    tornado are possible.

    Further east, convection may be a bit messier with ongoing showers
    or thunderstorm possible across parts of FL/GA Sunday morning.
    Additional thunderstorms will develop within low-level confluence
    bands and along sea breeze boundaries from the FL Peninsula into
    coastal GA/SC. While midlevel lapse rates will be weaker compared to
    further east, if stronger heating can occur, instability will be
    greater. A mix of multicells and a few supercells will bring a risk
    for isolated damaging gusts, hail, and a tornado or two.

    ...Northern Rockies/High Plains...

    A deepening upper trough will develop over the Northwest on Sunday.
    As this occurs, a belt of enhanced mid/upper southwesterly flow will
    overspread the northern Great Basin into the northern Rockies/High
    Plains. Cooling aloft will support steep midlevel lapse rates amid
    elongated hodographs. As modest destabilization occurs over the
    higher terrain during the afternoon, scattered thunderstorms will
    develop. This initial activity may pose a risk for hail and strong
    gusts. Convection will develop eastward into the adjacent High
    Plains from central MT into western ND during the afternoon and
    evening into a well-mixed boundary layer. Inverted-v sub-cloud
    thermodynamic profiles suggest strong downward transport and
    evaporative processes will foster strong wind gust potential. This
    will be especially true if any updraft consolidation into clusters
    occurs.

    ..Leitman.. 05/10/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun May 11 04:42:11 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 110442
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 110440

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1140 PM CDT Sat May 10 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS MONDAY ACROSS
    THE FL PENINSULA THROUGH NORTHEASTERN FL...MUCH OF GA AND
    SC...ADJACENT PORTIONS OF NC...NRN/ERN AL...ADJACENT SRN TN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong thunderstorms may impact parts of the Southeast on
    Monday, particularly a corridor across the Florida Peninsula into
    the South Carolina Piedmont, where strongest activity may pose a
    risk for producing a couple of tornadoes and locally strong surface
    gusts.

    ...Discussion...
    Latest model output remains similar to prior runs concerning the
    mid/upper flow evolution through this period. Within the amplified,
    split westerlies, one significant trough is forecast to continue
    digging inland of the U.S. Pacific coast, downstream of a prominent
    ridge now building across the mid-latitude eastern Pacific. It
    still appears that at least one notable smaller-scale perturbation
    emerging from this trough will accelerate northeast of the northern
    U.S. Rockies into the Canadian Prairies, around the northwestern
    periphery of broad downstream ridging encompassing much of the U.S.
    northern Great Plains through the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence
    Valley.

    In lower-levels, models indicate that deeper surface troughing will
    shift east of the Canadian and northern U.S. Rockies into
    Saskatchewan/Manitoba and the Dakotas, while deepening southward
    through the southern high plains. However, destabilization near
    this feature is likely to be significantly inhibited by warm air
    aloft, and the lack of appreciable low-level moisture return due to
    the continuing presence of a broad mid/upper low initially centered
    across the lower Mississippi Valley.

    Cut off from the stronger westerlies, to the south of the broad
    mid-level ridging, movement of this low is likely to remain slow;
    however, models indicate that it will probably elongate
    north-northeastward across the Mid South and lower Ohio Valley,
    while taking on a negative tilt east of the lower Mississippi Valley
    into Southeast. In lower levels, this may be accompanied by broad,
    weak surface troughing developing across much of the Southeast, as
    surface ridging slowly shifts east of the Atlantic Seaboard.

    ...Southeast...
    Differences linger among the various model output, but the gradient
    between the low-level ridging and troughing may continue to support
    a belt of modest southerly low-level flow (20-30+ kt around 850 mb)
    along a corridor roughly from the Florida Peninsula into the South
    Carolina Piedmont. It appears probable that this will coincide with
    a deep lower/mid-tropospheric moist plume emanating from the lower
    latitudes, beneath a belt of moderate to strong, difluent
    southwesterly high-level flow

    Much of this corridor may be impacted by considerable remnant
    convectively generated cloud cover, and perhaps continuing scattered thunderstorm development, at the outset of the period. However, the environment appears at least conditionally supportive of organized
    convection, including supercells, with potential to produce
    tornadoes and damaging wind gusts. And breaks in the cloud cover
    during the day may allow for sufficient insolation and
    boundary-layer destabilization to allow for some of this potential
    to be realized.

    Otherwise, closer to the mid-level cold core, models suggest that
    forcing for ascent downstream of an embedded cyclonic vorticity
    center may aid thunderstorm development across the northern/eastern
    Alabama into western Georgia vicinity. Despite at least some
    low-level drying in the wake of the aforementioned moist plume,
    thermodynamic profiles might still become conducive to small to
    marginally severe hail in widely scattered stronger cells, in the
    presence of modest deep-layer shear.

    ..Kerr.. 05/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun May 11 16:58:14 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 111658
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 111656

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1156 AM CDT Sun May 11 2025

    Valid 121200Z - 131200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE TENNESSEE VALLEY AND THE SOUTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong thunderstorms may impact parts of the Southeast on
    Monday. The strongest activity may pose a risk for a couple of
    tornadoes, locally strong surface gusts, and isolated hail.

    ...Southeast...

    The mid/upper low over the lower MS Valley will pivot northeast
    toward the TN Valley on Monday. A belt of enhanced
    south/southwesterly flow aloft will overspread portions of the
    Southeast. Vertically veering wind profiles, with 30-45 kt of flow
    between 700-500 mb, will support effective shear magnitude greater
    than 30 kt across much of the risk area. South/southeasterly
    low-level flow will maintain a moist airmass. Meanwhile, cool
    temperatures aloft will support modest midlevel lapse rates. Pockets
    of stronger daytime heating with aid in modest destabilization, with
    MLCAPE around 500-1000 J/kg forecast. Similar to the previous couple
    of days, bands of cells/clusters are expected through the day. This
    activity will pose an isolated risk for locally damaging gusts,
    marginal hail, and a tornado or two.

    ..Leitman.. 05/11/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon May 12 05:31:15 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 120530
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 120528

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 AM CDT Mon May 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    The risk for organized severe thunderstorms remains limited across
    the U.S. Tuesday through Tuesday night.

    ...Synopsis...
    A gradual amplification of the upper-level trough currently over the
    Pacific Northwest is expected over the next 48 hours across the
    western CONUS. This will maintain a southwesterly flow regime across
    the central and northern Rockies, which will promote steady lee
    troughing and modest moisture return across the Plains through
    Tuesday night. The eastward advection of a stout EML will result in
    strong capping across the southern Plains where moisture return will
    be the greatest. A few isolated high-based thunderstorms are
    possible along the surface trough late afternoon/early evening, and
    may produce strong downdrafts given deep boundary-layer mixing, but
    the overall convective signal remains too limited to warrant risk probabilities. Additional elevated convection is possible early
    Wednesday morning across the Dakotas as a cold front begins to push
    east across the northern Plains.

    Across the East, the upper low currently over the lower MS River
    Valley is expected to gradually de-amplify and lift to the
    northeast. Rich low-level moisture already in place ahead of this
    feature, coupled with daytime heating and limited inhibition, will
    maintain scattered thunderstorm chances for most areas east of the
    MS River to the central Appalachians. Loosely organized convection
    is possible across eastern NC Tuesday afternoon in the vicinity of a
    weak surface low/trough where low-level winds may be sufficiently
    backed to elongate hodographs. However, disparity in recent guidance
    regarding the overall convective environment and convective coverage
    in the wake of widespread early-morning precipitation precludes
    highlights. Similarly, somewhat organized convection may materialize
    across parts of MS/western AL Tuesday evening at the eastern
    periphery of the EML where capping will be weaker. While hodographs
    will be favorable for organized convection, weak forcing for ascent
    should limit the probability for sustained, robust storms.

    ..Moore.. 05/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon May 12 16:55:21 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 121655
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 121653

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1153 AM CDT Mon May 12 2025

    Valid 131200Z - 141200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms are not forecast on Tuesday.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    On Tuesday, an upper low will proceed northward across the TN and OH
    Valleys, beneath the larger-scale upper ridge extending from the
    Northeast into eastern Canada. As this occurs, winds aloft will
    generally weaken from FL into the Mid Atlantic, but cool
    temperatures aloft will maintain thunderstorm chances over much of
    the East. Severe chances will be limited by poor lapse rates aloft
    in most areas.

    To the west, a deep upper trough will move eastward across the Great
    Basin, with a intense midlevel speed max moving from southern CA
    toward the Four Corners area. Moderate southwest flow aloft will
    exist over the central and northern Rockies, with increasing
    west/northwest flow aloft from NM into TX north of a Mexican upper
    ridge. Beneath the upper trough, cold air aloft will favor daytime thunderstorms from the Sierra into the northern Rockies, and into
    the evening across the western Dakotas.

    ..Jewell.. 05/12/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue May 13 05:37:22 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 130537
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 130536

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1236 AM CDT Tue May 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE CENTRAL TO NORTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are possible mainly over
    parts of the Dakotas and Nebraska Wednesday afternoon and evening.
    A more isolated severe threat is anticipated across parts of the
    Southeast and Mid-Atlantic Wednesday afternoon.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper trough evident in water-vapor imagery over the Pacific
    Northwest is forecast to pivot into the central and northern Plains
    over the next 48 hours. As this occurs, strong to severe
    thunderstorms are expected to develop ahead of the wave and within a
    narrow warm sector in place across parts of the central to northern
    Plains. Across the Southeast and Mid-Atlantic, a weakening
    upper-level low will continue to de-amplify as it meanders to the
    northeast. Residual 25-35 knot mid-level flow will likely contribute
    to some storm organization as convection develops within a moist and
    weakly capped environment.

    ...Central to Northern Plains...
    Continued deepening of a surface trough is anticipated through the
    next 48 hours across the northern Plains. This will maintain a
    southeasterly flow regime across the Plains with modest moisture
    return anticipated within a narrow plume from NE into the Dakotas by
    Wednesday afternoon. A Pacific cold front, evident in late-evening
    surface observations across the Intermountain West, is forecast to
    progress east and impinge on the narrow warm sector by late
    afternoon/early evening. Storm motions and deep-layer shear vectors
    largely parallel to the front will favor relatively quick upscale
    growth into clusters/linear segments. Although shear will initially
    be modest, the high-based nature of the storms should promote a
    strong/severe wind threat. With time, strengthening mid to
    upper-level flow will elongate hodographs and may support an
    increasing hail threat into the evening hours as convection develops
    southward along the front. Some guidance hints at a second round of
    convection late evening into the overnight hours across southeast SD
    into NE as the primary vorticity maximum ejects into the Plains and
    promotes additional thunderstorm development along the advancing
    cold front.

    ...Carolinas to Mid-Atlantic...
    A moist air mass will remain in place across the Southeast and
    Mid-Atlantic through the next 48 hours in the absence of any
    synoptic fronts or influential gradient winds. Rich moisture through
    the lowest 100-200 mb will maintain weak capping and support
    diurnally driven convection by late afternoon as surface
    temperatures warm into the mid 70s under broken cloud cover. Similar
    to previous days, which have produced isolated damaging winds, weak
    low-level winds under 25-35 knot mid-level flow will promote
    transient storm organization. While a similar
    thermodynamic/kinematic environment will be in place across much of
    the Southeast on Wednesday, latest CAM guidance suggests the best
    severe potential resides across portions of the Carolinas into the
    DelMarVa region where thunderstorm coverage should be greatest ahead
    of the mid-level vorticity maximum.

    ..Moore.. 05/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue May 13 17:17:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 131717
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 131716

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1216 PM CDT Tue May 13 2025

    Valid 141200Z - 151200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE DAKOTAS...NEBRASKA...AND WESTERN IOWA AND SOUTHWEST MINNESOTA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered strong to severe thunderstorms are possible mainly over
    parts of the Dakotas and Nebraska Wednesday afternoon and evening,
    and perhaps into far western Iowa and southwest Minnesota overnight.
    A few strong gusts may occur over parts of the Southeast and
    Mid-Atlantic Wednesday afternoon.

    ...Synopsis...
    A potent upper speed max will move from the Four Corners area into
    the central Plains late Wednesday, with the overall trough taking on
    a negative tilt from MT into NE late. During the daytime, southerly
    flow and cooling aloft will proceed eastward across the northern
    Plains, where a surface trough will also deepen. This will provide a
    focus for afternoon storms, with additional activity late in the day
    over the central High Plains in association with the ejecting upper
    wave.

    To the east, a weakening upper trough will continue lifting north
    across the OH Valley, Great Lakes and Mid Atlantic, with cool
    temperatures aloft aiding daytime destabilization for scattered
    thunderstorms.

    ...Northern Plains...
    A north-south line of convection is forecast to form within the
    surface trough across the central Dakotas by 00Z, with additional
    activity developing over western NE. Shear will be marginal early
    on, but cool temperatures aloft and 1500-2000 J/kg MUCAPE will favor
    hail and locally strong gusts. During the evening and overnight,
    the environment will change rapidly as the upper trough approaches.
    Additional cooling aloft as well as developing 850 mb warm front
    should support an MCS or two, with damaging wind and hail both
    spreading across central and northern NE, eastern SD, and finally
    into western IA and southwest MN. Capping should limit southward
    development, perhaps to I-80 or so.

    ...Mid Atlantic Region...
    Cool midlevel temperatures will remain from the OH Valley into the
    Mid Atlantic beneath the ejecting upper trough. Dewpoints in the 60s
    F along with daytime heating will lead to pockets of 1500 J/kg
    MLCAPE, with generally weak but veering winds with height. Scattered
    storms appear most likely over central NC and VA, and a few strong
    wind gusts cannot be ruled out.

    ..Jewell.. 05/13/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 14 05:58:20 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 140556
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 140555

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1255 AM CDT Wed May 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE
    UPPER MISSISSIPPI RIVER VALLEY AND WESTERN GREAT LAKES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected across parts of the
    upper Mississippi River Valley and western Great Lakes region
    Thursday afternoon and evening. More isolated severe thunderstorms
    are expected through the lower Ohio River Valley, Ozarks Plateau,
    and parts of the Mid-Atlantic.

    ...Synopsis...
    The upper-level trough currently over the Intermountain
    West/northern Rockies is forecast to eject into the upper MS River
    Valley over the next 48 hours. As this occurs, a Pacific cold front
    will rapidly push east into the MS Valley and Midwest as an intense
    surface cyclone begins to occlude over the eastern Dakotas/western
    MN. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop along the front
    by early-afternoon with increasing coverage across the upper MS
    Valley through early evening. Increasingly sparse, but severe,
    thunderstorms are anticipated along the front across the Midwest
    into the lower OH Valley and Ozarks/Texarkana regions through the
    evening and overnight hours.

    ...Upper MS Valley and western Great Lakes...
    04 UTC surface observations show upper 50s to low 60s dewpoints
    already spreading northwest into the upper MS Valley as a surface
    low begins to organized across the northern Plains. Confidence
    remains high that dewpoints in the mid 60s should overspread much of
    the region by mid-day Thursday and will contribute to regional
    MLCAPE values upwards of 2000-2500 J/kg. Strong forcing for ascent
    along the approaching front and within the left-exit region of a
    50-60 knot mid-level jet will erode capping at the base of a stout
    EML and promote thunderstorm development by early afternoon across
    parts of central to southern MN. Elongated hodographs with
    cross-boundary mean winds will promote organized, initially discrete/semi-discrete cells with an attendant severe wind and hail (potentially as large as 2 inches) threat. Veering winds through the
    lowest 2 km will also support a tornado threat with early
    convection.

    With time, persistent strong forcing along the front should promote
    some degree of upscale growth/clustering, though supercells will
    remain likely on the southern fringe of the line where capping will
    remain stronger and favor more isolated convection. The potential
    for somewhat longer-lived supercells may be maximized across
    southeast WI into adjacent portions of IL, northern IN, and
    southwest lower MI. Forecast soundings depict ESRH values on the
    order of 200-300 m2/s2, suggesting a significant tornado threat
    could materialize. Confidence in the coverage of such cells remains
    limited, but trends will be monitored for the need for increased
    tornado risk probabilities.

    ...Midwest and Ohio Valley...
    Forecast guidance continues to show the best moisture return across
    parts of IL, IN, and northern KY by Thursday afternoon. Dewpoints in
    the upper 60s to low 70s under nearly 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates
    will support a very unstable air mass with MLCAPE values approaching
    4000 J/kg. Despite the very favorable buoyancy, capping at the base
    of the EML is expected to limit storm coverage across this region.
    Recent guidance has trended towards perhaps a slightly increased
    coverage of thunderstorms compared to previous runs, but the overall
    consensus among deterministic and CAM ensemble guidance is that
    storm coverage should be sparse. Nonetheless, effective bulk shear
    values on the order of 40-50 knots will promote supercells during
    the late afternoon/evening hours with all hazards possible,
    including the potential for significant hail/tornadoes.
    Consideration was given for an expansion of the Enhanced risk area,
    but limited confidence in convective coverage precluded such
    expansion.

    ...Texarkana to the Ozark Plateau...
    Weaker forcing along the front and strong capping will likely limit thunderstorm coverage from the Texarkana region into the Ozark
    Plateau during the afternoon/evening. Heading into the overnight
    hours, increasing low-level isentropic ascent over the frontal
    boundary will support thunderstorm development - especially across
    the Ozarks into the mid-MS Valley. Strong deep-layer shear will
    promote initial supercells, but storm propagation along the front
    will likely promote clustering with time. Nonetheless, a severe
    hail/wind threat will likely materialize within this corridor.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    A moist, weakly capped air mass is expected to remain in place
    across the Mid-Atlantic through Thursday afternoon. While lapse
    rates will be modest after several days of convective overturning,
    temperatures warming into the upper 70s/low 80s will promote
    sufficient buoyancy for thunderstorm development. Upper ridging
    moving into the region will likely limit thunderstorm coverage, but
    convection developing along the Blue Ridge Mountains will mature in
    an environment with increasing deep-layer shear. A few organized
    cells appear possible with an attendant severe hail/wind threat.

    ..Moore.. 05/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 14 17:37:25 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 141737
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 141736

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1236 PM CDT Wed May 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM
    EAST-CENTRAL MINNESOTA INTO MUCH OF WISCONSIN...NORTHEAST
    ILLINOIS...SOUTHWEST LOWER MICHIGAN...AND NORTHERN INDIANA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected across parts of the upper
    Mississippi River Valley and Great Lakes region Thursday afternoon
    and evening. The primary risk with this activity is large to very
    large hail, tornadoes (a couple may be strong), and scattered wind
    damage.

    More isolated severe thunderstorms are expected through the lower
    Ohio River Valley, Ozarks Plateau, and parts of the Mid-Atlantic.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper cyclone centered over the Dakotas, and attendant
    negative-tilt shortwave trough will deepen and spread northeast
    across the Upper Midwest on Thursday. A belt of enhanced mid/upper southwesterly flow will overspread the region, with a secondary jet
    streak oriented from the southern Plains to the Ohio Valley.

    At the surface, low pressure is forecast over eastern SD during the
    morning. The deepening surface low will lift north/northeast into
    northern MN through much of the forecast period. As this occurs, a
    warm front arcing southeast from the low to the Ohio Valley will
    lift northward during the afternoon and into the evening. This will
    allow a moist warm sector to lift northward across the Upper MS
    Valley and Great Lakes vicinity. Extending south from the surface
    low, a dryline will be in place from the Mid-MO valley into eastern
    OK and central TX. This feature will develop east/northeast across MN/WI/IA/MO/IL through the evening.

    Severe thunderstorm activity is expected near the triple point, and
    along the warm front and dryline (where a capping inversion is able
    to be overcome).

    ...Upper Midwest/Great Lakes vicinity...

    Convection will likely be ongoing Thursday morning near the surface
    low and beneath the upper low. Cold temperatures aloft will support
    steepened midlevel lapse rates within modest boundary layer moisture
    across the eastern Dakotas. Hail will be possible with this
    activity. Supercell wind profiles are also expected into late
    morning, and additional low-topped convection may develop from late
    morning into early afternoon, posing a risk of hail, gusty winds and
    a tornado or two across the eastern Dakotas.

    By afternoon, mid-60s F dewpoints are expected within a somewhat
    narrow warm sector from central MN southeast into WI and northern
    IL. As large-scale ascent increases, thunderstorms are expected to
    develop in an arc from east-central MN into southeast WI on the nose
    of a 40-50 kt low-level jet and midlevel dry slot. Vertically
    veering winds will produce supercell wind profiles. Low-level
    hodographs will become enlarged, in part due to the increasing
    low-level jet, but also within the warm front zone. Additionally,
    steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE greater than 2500 J/kg are
    possible. This should support robust updrafts and rapidly increasing
    storm intensity once initiation occurs. Large to very large hail (up
    to 3 inch diameter) and tornadoes (a couple may be strong) appear
    possible within the moisture-rich, favorably sheared warm sector.
    Given strong 850-700 mb flow and steepening low-level lapse rates
    where strong heating occurs, severe gust potential is also expected.
    Current thinking is that given the orthogonal nature of low-level
    flow to the surface boundaries, supercell storm mode may be favored,
    with perhaps a trend toward bowing segment during the evening. A
    gust to 80 mph cannot be ruled out, but given uncertainty in storm
    mode transitioning to or favoring linear segments have held off on
    adding a sig-wind delineation.

    The bands of severe storms should develop northeast with time into
    the evening, with a gradual weakening trend expected across Upper
    and Lower MI.

    ...Northern IL/IN into OH/PA vicinity...

    Storm coverage is more uncertain with southward extent due to
    increasing capping in the 850-700 mb layer, and weaker large-scale
    ascent. Nevertheless, isolated to widely scattered storms are
    expected to develop during the afternoon in a strongly unstable and
    moderately sheared environment. Supercells producing large hail, a
    couple of tornadoes and damaging gusts will be possible into the
    evening hours across IL/IN. Additional activity is expected to
    develop in the low-level warm advection regime during the
    evening/overnight hours across portions of OH/western PA. This
    activity may remain elevated, but would still pose a risk for hail,
    or perhaps isolated gusty winds if clustering occurs.

    ...Ozarks to Mid-South/Ohio Valley...
    Further south from southeast MO/southern IL into KY, modest height
    falls are forecast during the evening/overnight hours. This may be
    sufficient to either overcome capping, or to allow elevated
    convection to develop. Severe storms capable of damaging gusts,large
    hail and a tornado or two appear possible, though this risk is a bit
    more uncertain/conditional and coverage may be low.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...

    A moist, weakly capped air mass is expected to remain in place
    across the Mid-Atlantic through Thursday afternoon. While lapse
    rates will be modest after several days of convective overturning,
    temperatures warming into the upper 70s/low 80s will promote
    sufficient buoyancy for thunderstorm development. Upper ridging
    moving into the region will likely limit thunderstorm coverage, but
    convection developing along the Blue Ridge Mountains will mature in
    an environment with increasing deep-layer shear. A few organized
    cells appear possible with an attendant severe hail/wind threat.

    ..Leitman.. 05/14/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 15 05:30:31 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 150530
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 150529

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1229 AM CDT Thu May 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FRIDAY
    AFTERNOON INTO FRIDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF NORTHEASTERN
    ARKANSAS...EAST CENTRAL AND SOUTHEASTERN MISSOURI...SOUTHERN ILLINOIS...SOUTHERN INDIANA...SOUTHWESTERN OHIO...MUCH OF WESTERN
    AND CENTRAL KY...WESTERN AND MIDDLE TENNESSEE...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms appear likely to develop across parts of the
    middle Mississippi through lower and middle Ohio Valleys Friday
    afternoon into Friday night. During the late afternoon into
    evening, this may include a few intense supercells posing a risk for
    large hail and tornadoes. During the evening into the overnight
    hours, this probably will include an upscale growing and organizing
    cluster posing a risk for strong, damaging winds and perhaps a
    continuing risk for tornadoes.

    ...Discussion...
    Downstream of a prominent mid-level high over the southern mid- to
    subtropical latitudes of the eastern Pacific, split flow will
    persist across much of North America through this period. Within
    this regime an initially deep and occluded surface cyclone, centered
    over northern Minnesota at the outset of the period, is forecast to
    weaken Friday through Friday night, as it migrates into the Upper
    Great Lakes region in response to a short wave perturbation pivoting
    around the southern periphery of the mid-level circulation center.
    It appears that this perturbation will come in phase with another
    short wave perturbation forecast to accelerate east-northeast of the
    central Great Plains through much of the Ohio Valley by early
    Saturday. Another vigorous short wave trough digging around the
    northeastern periphery of the Pacific ridge may reach the northern
    California coast by the end of the period, preceded by at least one
    more modest perturbation migrating northeastward across the northern
    Baja vicinity.

    In lower levels, associated with the occluding cyclone, a
    weak/weakening Pacific cold front/dry line appears likely to stall
    across the lower Great Lakes through Ohio River vicinity, and across
    the Ark-La-Tex into Rio Grande River by 12Z Friday. This may be
    trailed by another weak front across the Upper Midwest through the
    central Great Plains and Texas South Plains, which is forecast to be
    overtaken by the primary cold front surging southeastward from the
    upper Mississippi Valley/northern Great Plains. By late Friday
    night, this cold front may reach the lower Ohio Valley and central
    Great Plains.

    Preceding the consolidating fronts, low-level moisture return and
    moderate to strong destabilization is forecast across the middle
    Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys on strengthening south to
    southwesterly flow. The potential northern extent of the moisture
    return remains unclear, based on model output, and this could be
    impacted by outflow associated with possible early period convective development across the lower Ohio Valley into portions of the
    Allegheny and Cumberland Plateaus. Depending on how these
    uncertainties play out, it might not be out of the question that a
    more substantive outbreak of severe thunderstorms could evolve than
    currently depicted. It is possible areal coverage and probabilities
    could be increased further in later outlooks for this period.

    ...Lower Great Lakes into northern Mid Atlantic...
    Uncertainty lingers concerning the potential for severe weather.
    However, the intersection of the initial weak surface cold
    front/dryline and warm front could still be providing a focus for
    strong to severe thunderstorm development at the outset of the
    period across the lower Great Lakes/upper Ohio Valley vicinity.
    Aided by continuing inflow from better potential instability across
    the Ohio Valley, in the presence of moderate to strong vertical
    shear, it is possible that this could continue into the day Friday,
    perhaps evolving into an organizing cluster which should tend to
    propagate southeastward and perhaps pose potential for strong to
    severe surface gusts.

    ...Middle Mississippi into Ohio Valley...
    There remains at least some signal that a modest short wave
    perturbation, within the belt of westerlies emanating from the
    subtropical eastern Pacific, may be contributing to vigorous
    convective development at the outset of the period, or shortly
    thereafter, across parts of the lower Ohio Valley. If this occurs,
    it might not be out of the question that the boundary-layer
    downstream, into the western slopes of the Appalachians, might
    destabilize in time to support an upscale growing cluster with
    potential to produce to produce severe wind and hail.

    The impact of this possible early period convection might be the
    primary contributor to at least some continuing model disparity
    concerning upstream boundary-layer moistening and destabilization
    (particularly the northern extent) across the middle Mississippi
    into lower Ohio Valleys. However, it still appears most probable
    that destabilization, as far north as the I-44 corridor of
    central/eastern Missouri, will support the initiation of storms by
    early afternoon, in response to forcing for ascent associated with
    the mid-level perturbation emerging from the central Great Plains.

    This is generally forecast to shift east-northeastward into the
    lower Ohio Valley through late Friday afternoon, in an environment
    that may support at least a window of opportunity for
    sustained/long-lived supercells with potential to produce large to
    giant hail and a couple of strong tornadoes. Into Friday evening
    and overnight, there remains a considerable signal in model output
    that large-scale forcing for ascent will support a notable upscale
    growing and organizing cluster, in the presence of seasonably strong
    (and increasingly convectively augmented) westerly deep-layer mean
    flow. This may support widespread severe surface gusts,
    occasionally in excess of 65 kt, across a swath from southern
    Indiana/western Kentucky and northern Tennessee toward the Allegheny
    and Cumberland Plateaus.

    ..Kerr.. 05/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 15 17:22:45 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 151722
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 151720

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1220 PM CDT Thu May 15 2025

    Valid 161200Z - 171200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    SOUTHEAST MISSOURI...SOUTHERN ILLINOIS/INDIANA...AND CENTRAL AND
    WESTERN KENTUCKY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A regional outbreak of severe thunderstorms is likely across parts
    of the middle Mississippi and Ohio Valleys Friday afternoon into
    Friday night. This may include a few intense supercells posing a
    risk for large hail and tornadoes. During the evening into the
    overnight hours, this will include an upscale growing and organizing
    bowing line of storms posing a risk for strong, damaging winds and a
    continuing risk for tornadoes.

    ...A regional outbreak of severe storms is expected on Friday across
    portions of the Mid-South to the Ohio Valley...

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper cyclone over the Upper Midwest and attendant shortwave
    trough will develop east/northeast across much of the Midwest and TN
    Valley. A swath of strong mid/upper southwesterly flow will
    accompany this system. Forecast guidance shows a 70-90 kt 500 mb jet
    spreading across the Mid-MS to OH Valley, while 850-700 mb increases
    to 40-60 kt by midday. This will result in supercell wind profiles,
    support widespread organized convection. Favorable deep-layer shear
    will extend downstream into the central Appalachians and
    Mid-Atlantic vicinity as well.

    At the surface, low pressure will shift east from northern MN into
    the Upper Great Lakes. A warm from southern MO into the OH Valley
    Friday morning is forecast to lift northward through the afternoon,
    allowing rich boundary layer moisture (mid/upper 60s F dewpoints) to
    overspread much of the Lower OH Valley, with a large warm sector in
    place across a broad region from east TX to the Great Lakes and
    eastward toward the Mid-Atlantic coast. Corridors of moderate to
    strong destabilization during the day and into the nighttime hours
    will support several areas of severe storms from east Texas into
    much of the Midwest and the Mid-Atlantic, some of which could be
    significant.

    ...Mid-MS Valley into the OH/TN Valley Vicinity...

    Forecast guidance depicts potential for remnant convection from Day
    1/Thu ongoing across KY or TN Friday morning. Current expectation is
    that this activity will dissipate or weaken as it shifts east toward
    the central Appalachians. Strong warm advection should allow for
    rapid airmass recovery in the way of any morning thunderstorm
    activity.

    By midday, a very moist (mid 60s to low 70s F dewpoints) airmass
    will be in place beneath steep midlevel lapse rates, fostering
    MLCAPE around 2500-3500 J/kg from southeast MO northward to around
    the I-70 corridor and east toward the IN/KY. One or more clusters of
    convection is expected to develop by early afternoon within the
    strong warm advection regime and as large-scale ascent increases
    with the approach of the upper trough and an eastward-advancing cold
    front extending from eastern IA/western MO into central OK/TX around
    midday.

    Supercell wind profiles with enlarged low-level hodographs becoming
    elongated above 2-3 km within a volatile thermodynamic environment
    suggests convection will rapidly intensify. Any convection that
    remains discrete will pose a risk for very large hail (up to 3.5
    inches), tornadoes (a few may be strong), and damaging gusts. With
    time, consolidation of thunderstorm clusters is expected and an
    organized bow is forecast to move across the OH/TN Valley region.
    Intense, damaging gusts greater than 70 kt will be possible once
    this occurs.

    Additional convection is expected to develop during the evening
    ahead of the advancing cold front from northern AR into western
    TN/KY. If this activity can remain discrete, supercells will pose an all-hazards severe risk. Eventually, this activity should become
    linear, but will still have an attendant wind/tornado risk, with a
    gradual weakening trend during the overnight hours expected across
    MS/AL/GA.

    ...Central Appalachians to Mid-Atlantic...

    Thunderstorms may be ongoing Friday morning across parts of PA and
    spread east/southeast through early afternoon as a lead upper
    shortwave impulse moves across the Northeast. Moistening and heating
    ahead of this activity will support moderate to strong
    destabilization, especially from the Chesapeake Bay vicinity
    southward across the VA/NC Piedmont. The initial round of
    thunderstorms may pose a risk for locally strong gusts and hail
    before moving offshore the NJ/DE/MD coast during the early
    afternoon.

    During the evening/overnight hours, a mature bowing MCS is expected
    to move over the WV/VA/NC mountains and spread east across the
    region, posing a risk for swaths of strong to damaging wind gusts.
    Forecast guidance varies in timing and exact evolution of this
    system across the region, but portions of the area may need higher probabilities in subsequent outlooks.

    ...WI/MI...

    Thunderstorms are expected to develop ahead of the surface low and
    cold front during the afternoon and evening. Cold temperatures aloft
    will support steep midlevel lapse rates and weak to moderate
    instability despite more modest boundary layer moisture. Favorable
    shear will support organized convection capable of isolated damaging
    gusts and hail.

    ...ArkLaTex vicinity...

    A more conditional risk of significant severe thunderstorms will
    exist across northeast TX into southern AR/northwest LA. A very
    moist and strongly unstable airmass will be in place, and forecast
    guidance suggests capping should erode along/ahead of the surface
    dryline. Low-level convergence along the surface boundary is not
    expected to be strong, and large-scale ascent will be nebulous, with
    neutral height tendencies expected. Nevertheless, at least a few
    storms are expected to develop during/just after peak heating.
    Supercell wind profiles, with long/straight hodographs are apparent
    in forecast soundings. Furthermore, thermodynamic profiles will be
    very favorable for large hail, while steepening low-level lapse
    rates will support strong outflow winds. Isolated significant hail
    (to 2.5 inches) is possible in addition to sporadic damaging gusts.

    ..Leitman.. 05/15/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 16 05:59:28 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 160558
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 160557

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1257 AM CDT Fri May 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO ARKANSAS AND OVER PARTS OF THE MID-ATLANTIC
    AND NORTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are possible Saturday across parts of the Mid
    Atlantic and Northeast, and across parts of the southeastern Great
    Plains to Lower Mississippi Valley.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level low centered across the western Great Lakes Saturday
    morning will shift east through the day and move over the Northeast
    by 12Z Sunday. Moderate to strong mid-level flow will expand south
    from the southern Great Lakes to the Southeast. Farther west, a
    weakening mid-level shortwave trough will advance from northern
    Mexico into the Southern Plains. A mid-level jet streak associated
    with this mid-level shortwave trough will overspread portions of central/northern Texas and into Oklahoma on Saturday. A strong
    mid-level jet streak will move into the Intermountain West on
    Saturday and amplify a trough across the western CONUS.

    ...Mid Atlantic to the Northeast...
    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    across portions of the Upper Ohio Valley and eastern Great Lakes.
    This convection and cloudcover associated with it, casts
    considerable uncertainty on destabilization, particularly across the
    Northeast. However, mid-60s dewpoints are anticipated ahead of the
    cold front as it moves eastward through the day. This moisture,
    combined with cooling temperatures aloft. Could be sufficient for
    damaging wind gusts and perhaps isolated large hail.

    The most favorable zone for severe storms will likely exist across
    eastern North Carolina into southeast Virginia. This zone is far
    enough south to likely remain mostly cloud free which will promote
    surface heating and destabilization. In addition, the stronger
    mid-level flow is forecast to overspread this region which would
    support storm organization and the potential for supercells. Given
    the greater instability and shear with potential for supercell storm
    mode, large hail and damaging wind gusts appear most likely within
    this region.

    ...Southeast...
    The cold front will likely become stalled across the Southeast on
    Saturday. South of this front, moderate to strong instability is
    forecast with 50 knots of flow parallel to the boundary. Forcing
    will remain weak along this boundary with minimal surface
    convergence and mostly neutral heights aloft. Therefore, storms are
    possible along this boundary, and could be supercellular if they
    form, but coverage should be isolated if any storms form at all
    given the weak forcing.

    ...Central Texas into Oklahoma, Arkansas, and northern Louisiana...
    Moderate to strong instability is forecast across central/northern
    Texas Saturday afternoon as temperatures warm into the low 80s with
    dewpoints in the low 70s and 500mb temperatures around -10C. Weak
    large scale forcing will overspread the dryline during the afternoon
    as a right entrance region of the upper-level jet overspreads
    northern Texas. Any subtle large scale forcing will likely be
    sufficient for rapid storm development along the uncapped
    dryline/triple point in north-central Texas by mid-afternoon. Large
    hail (some 2+ inch) will be the initial threat from supercells along
    the dryline. However, CAM signals suggest a combination of left and right-moving supercells congealing into a cluster/MCS rather quickly
    with an increasing severe wind threat. These mode concerns limit
    higher hail/tornado probabilities at this time, despite a very
    unstable and strongly sheared environment across the region.

    Additional supercells may develop Saturday evening and into early
    Sunday morning across eastern Oklahoma into the Ozarks as isentropic
    ascent increases with the strengthening low-level jet. These storms
    will pose a primary threat of large hail.

    ...Utah into Southeast Idaho and Southwest Wyoming...
    Rapidly cooling temperatures aloft across the Great Basin on
    Saturday will result in weak destabilization and numerous storms. A
    deep, well-mixed boundary layer will support the potential for
    severe wind gusts from the stronger cores.

    ..Bentley.. 05/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 16 17:26:02 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 161725
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 161724

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1224 PM CDT Fri May 16 2025

    Valid 171200Z - 181200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND THE NORTHEAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms producing large to very large hail, damaging
    gusts and a couple of tornadoes are possible across the southern
    Plains on Saturday. Additional severe storms are possible across the
    Northeast.

    ...Synopsis...

    An upper trough extending from the Great Lakes toward the TN
    Valley/southern Appalachians will develop east through the period,
    moving mostly offshore the Atlantic coast Saturday night/early
    Sunday morning. Further west, an upper trough will dig across the
    western U.S., while an upper ridge builds over the Plains. A
    shortwave impulse over the southern Rockies is expected to move
    through the upper ridge over the southern Plains. Enhanced
    west/southwesterly flow associated with the southern Plains impulse
    and the larger-scale trough over the East will persist through much
    of the period.

    At the surface, a cold front will move across much of the central
    Appalachians and Mid-Atlantic/Northeast. The southwest extent of
    this boundary will lift northward across OK and parts of the Ozark
    Plateau. Meanwhile, a dryline will extend southward across portions
    of western OK/TX.

    ... Southern Plains to the Lower MS Valley Vicinity...

    Rich boundary layer moisture will be in place across the warm sector
    east of the dryline and south of the northward retreating warm front
    from OK/TX into AR/LA. More modest dewpoints in the low 60s F should
    spread into southern KS/MO during the evening/overnight hours as
    well. While capping will initially be in place, continued warm
    advection and increasing ascent from the midlevel shortwave impulse
    ejecting from the southern Rockies should overcome the EML across
    north TX into southern OK. Supercell wind profiles with
    elongated/straight hodographs and very steep midlevel lapse rates
    suggest splitting supercells producing large to very large hail will
    be possible. With time, clustering may result in an eastward
    progressing MCS moving across the ArkLaTex vicinity during the
    evening.

    Overnight, additional convection may develop within the warm frontal
    zone from northwest OK/southern KS into southwest MO/northwest AR.
    This activity may remain elevated to the north of the warm front.
    Nevertheless, vertical shear and thermodynamic conditions will be
    favorable for large hail. Some upscale growth may occur with
    clusters developing eastward within the baroclinic zone. If this
    occurs, some increase in strong wind potential could also occur.

    More isolated/conditional risk will extend southwestward along the
    surface dryline across west-central/southwest TX toward the Middle
    Rio Grande Valley/Del Rio vicinity. Any storms that develop in this
    area, or cross the border will pose a risk for large hail and strong
    gusts.

    ...Northeast...

    Modest boundary layer moisture is expected across the region.
    Cooling aloft will aid in 500-1000 J/kg MLCAPE ahead of the surface
    cold front. Elongated/straight hodographs and greater than 30 kt
    effective shear suggest scattered convection may produce hail up to
    1.5 inch diameter in the strongest cells. Steepened low-level lapse
    rates also may support sporadic strong gusts, especially if any clustering/linear segments develop.

    ...Carolinas into the Mid-Atlantic...

    Outflow from overnight storms is expected to move across the eastern
    Carolinas and the Chesapeake Bay vicinity during the morning. Some
    airmass recovery is possible ahead of the eastward advancing cold
    front expected to move through later in the afternoon/evening.
    However, subsidence and drying aloft may inhibit redevelopment.
    Stronger midlevel flow is also expected to weaken through the day.
    Overall, severe potential appear low across the Chesapeake with a
    more uncertain/conditional risk across the eastern Carolinas. If
    storms can develop over eastern NC/SC, some risk for gusty winds and
    hail is possible.

    ...Deep South...

    Large scale ascent will remain nebulous across the region. However,
    the composite cold front and outflow from earlier convection will
    sag southward through peak heating. A very moist airmass will be in
    place, but midlevel lapse rates will be modest, resulting in MLCAPE
    around 1000-1500 J/kg. Effective shear magnitudes greater than 35 kt
    will support organized convection capable of hail and strong gusts
    should any storms develop and become sustained.

    ...Northern UT into southwest WY...

    As the western upper trough digs south/southeast across the Great
    Basin, rapid cooling aloft will result in weak destabilization and
    numerous storms. A deep, well-mixed boundary layer will support the
    potential for severe wind gusts from the stronger cores.

    ..Leitman.. 05/16/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 17 06:09:09 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 170603
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 170602

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0102 AM CDT Sat May 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN
    OKLAHOMA AND MUCH OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms capable of all severe hazards are expected on
    Sunday across portions of the central and southern Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level shortwave trough will move from the Southwest into the
    Central Plains on Sunday as the broader trough develops across the Intermountain West. By 00Z Monday, a ~992mb lee cyclone will develop
    along the KS/CO border. A warm front will extend from this surface
    low into northern Kansas/southern Nebraska by Sunday evening and
    will remain mostly stationary across the Southeast. A dryline will
    extend from central Kansas to the southern Plains.

    ...Kansas and northern Oklahoma...
    A very moist airmass will be in place east of the dryline on Sunday
    with low 70s dewpoints forecast across much of Texas, Oklahoma, and
    southern Kansas ahead of the surface boundary. As temperatures warm,
    strong to very strong instability is forecast to develop. As the
    mid-level shortwave trough emerges across the Plains, synoptic-scale
    ascent will combine with the increasing instability to decrease
    inhibition across much of the dryline. Forecast guidance shows
    limited convergence along the dryline in Oklahoma and Texas during
    the day Sunday with the better convergence focused across Kansas.
    Therefore, confidence is higher for storms across central and
    southern Kansas and perhaps into northern Oklahoma.

    Any storms which develop will be supercellular with a threat for
    very large hail and tornadoes, particularly by later in the evening
    as the low-level jet strengthens. While confidence is higher in
    storms across the Enhanced risk area, storm evolution remains
    unclear. 00Z CAM guidance has wide variations in the northeastward
    progression of the surface warm front which will significantly
    impact storm development on Sunday. A more discrete storm mode would
    likely pose a greater very large hail and tornado threat, while more
    widespread storm development would likely favor development into a
    MCS which could pose a greater severe wind threat across eastern
    Kansas and into Missouri.

    Despite the uncertainties, the Enhanced (Level 3 of 5) risk seems
    appropriately placed where severe storms are most likely. The 10%
    tornado probabilities do not extend to the northern extent of the
    Enhanced due to the aforementioned uncertainties in the warm frontal
    position. However, elevated hail will remain a threat north of the
    warm front.

    ...Oklahoma/Texas...
    A dryline will be in place across western Oklahoma and north Texas
    for much of the day Sunday. Convergence will be mostly weak along
    the Oklahoma dryline for much of the day with better convergence
    farther south in Texas, farther from the better upper-level forcing.
    However, by the evening, convergence will increase somewhat which
    could result in isolated supercell development as the low-level jet
    intensifies during the evening. The environment across Oklahoma and
    North Texas will be very volatile with a conditional threat for
    intense supercells capable of very large hail and strong tornadoes.

    ...Northeast CO/Southwest Nebraska Vicinity...
    By Sunday afternoon, low to mid 60s dewpoints will advect westward
    around the surface low into northwest Kansas, northeast Colorado,
    and southwest Nebraska. Moderate to strong instability is forecast
    ahead of the dryline which will aid in supercell development by the
    afternoon. A narrow corridor of instability will be the primary
    limiting factor to the tornado threat in an otherwise very favorable
    STP environment. It appears supercells will likely be north of the
    boundary before maturing which will support a primary threat for
    large hail. However, if a storm can rapidly mature as it develops
    off the dryline, it could pose a tornado threat given the favorable
    low-level shear across the region.

    ...Mid Mississippi Valley to the Southeast...
    Isolated thunderstorms are possible along a stalled frontal zone
    that will extend from the Mid-Mississippi Valley to the Southeast.
    Moderate to strong instability will be in place within a moderately
    sheared environment. Forcing will be weak along the front with
    neutral to perhaps slightly rising heights aloft. However, forecast
    soundings show minimal inhibition and therefore, isolated
    development is possible. A greater severe threat could materialize
    from a remnant MCV/MCS which will likely evolve from Day 1/Saturday
    convection across north Texas. If this maintains along the frontal
    zone into the late morning on Sunday, it could provide a focused
    region of greater severe weather threat Sunday afternoon across
    AL/GA.

    ..Bentley.. 05/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat May 17 17:40:32 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 171739
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 171738

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1238 PM CDT Sat May 17 2025

    Valid 181200Z - 191200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    CENTRAL KS INTO NORTHERN OK...AND FAR NORTHEAST COLORADO INTO
    WESTERN NEBRASKA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms capable of all severe hazards are still
    expected on Sunday across portions of the central and southern
    Plains, as well as parts of the central High Plains.

    ...Synopsis...
    A negatively tilted mid-level trough will traverse the central
    Rockies and eject into the Plains states, encouraging rapid surface
    low development along the CO/KS tomorrow (Sunday). Ahead of the
    surface low and sharpening dryline, rapid north-northwestward
    advection of relatively rich low-level moisture beneath a pronounced
    EML will result in strong buoyancy across much of the central and
    southern Plains. Furthermore, a low-level jet will overspread the
    Plains states, beneath strong southwesterly 500 mb flow associated
    with the ejecting upper trough, resulting in strong vertical speed
    and directional shear coinciding with the aforementioned unstable
    environment. Multiple clusters of strong to severe thunderstorms are
    expected to develop near, and to the north of the surface low, ahead
    of the dryline, and along an effective warm front across the central
    Plains, with all convective hazards possible. Lastly, isolated
    strong storms are possible along a diffuse baroclinic boundary
    across the Southeast tomorrow afternoon.

    ...Portions of the central High Plains...
    A narrow corridor of mid to upper 50s F surface dewpoints may advect
    to the north of the surface low by afternoon, ahead of an arching
    dryline, where scattered thunderstorms should develop. 8-9 C/km
    mid-level lapse rates will overspread this moisture ahead of the
    dryline, supporting well over 1000 J/kg MLCAPE amid 50+ kts of
    effective bulk shear. Forecast soundings show very long hodographs,
    with a subset of these forecast soundings also depicting
    enlarged/curved low-level hodographs. Supercells are expected to be
    the dominant mode, with large hail the main threat. At least a few
    instances of 2+ inch diameter hail and severe gusts may also occur,
    along with a few tornadoes. If a mature, discrete supercell can
    materialize and achieve substantial residence time within the narrow
    warm sector, the storm may become cyclic tornadic in nature.
    However, confidence in this scenario is not overly high at this
    time.

    ...Kansas into central Texas...
    At least scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop along the
    leading edge of greater moisture return along the KS/OK border by
    early afternoon. With strong shear/instability already in place,
    supercells are likely, accompanied by a large hail threat. Questions
    remain how far north the better moisture will return into KS given
    possible stabilizing impacts of these storms. However, by mid to
    late afternoon, some eastward advancement of the dryline should
    encourage a second round of supercell development along the KS/OK
    border. Ahead of these storms and south of the effective warm front,
    surface dewpoints should exceed 70 F in spots, beneath 8 C/km
    mid-level lapse rates, boosting MLCAPE to over 3000 J/kg on a
    widespread basis. Substantial veering/strengthening of the vertical
    wind fields with height will also result in enlarged, curved
    hodographs and over 300 m2/s2 effective SRH sometime between 21-00Z.
    Any supercells that can mature and sustain themselves in this
    environment will have the potential to produce very large hail
    (perhaps exceeding 3 inches in diameter) and tornadoes (some
    possibly EF2+).

    Storm coverage is expected to be less across central OK into central
    TX owing to less low-level convergence along the dryline. However,
    3000+ J/kg MLCAPE amid 300+ m2/s2 effective SRH will support
    supercells capable of producing very large hail and tornadoes should
    storms develop farther south along the dryline.

    ...Portions of the Southeast...
    Scattered strong storms should develop along the baroclinic boundary
    across the Southeast by afternoon peak heating tomorrow (Sunday).
    Rich low-level moisture beneath modest mid-level lapse rates will
    support over 2000 J/kg SBCAPE, with strong flow aloft also
    contributing to elongated, mainly straight hodographs. Stronger
    storms that develop in this environment will be capable of large
    hail and gusty winds.

    ..Squitieri.. 05/17/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun May 18 06:04:17 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 180602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 180600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Sun May 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE OZARKS....

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms with all severe weather hazards are expected from the central/southern Plains into the Ozarks on Monday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will shift from the Intermountain West into the
    central Plains on Monday. A moderate to strong mid-level jet streak
    will emerge along the southern periphery of this trough from the
    Southwest into the central/southern Plains. A surface low in
    Nebraska will gradually consolidate southward and deepen as the
    mid-level jet emerges across the southern Plains. A sharp dryline
    will be present from central Kansas to central Oklahoma and
    north-central Texas. A warm front will extend from near Omaha to the
    lower Ohio Valley and remain mostly stationary during the day.

    ...Central/Southern Plains into the Ozarks...
    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing along the warm front in the
    northern Missouri border vicinity on Monday morning. Otherwise, a
    mostly convection-free warm sector is expected to the south. Very
    strong instability will develop along and east of the dryline with
    convective temperatures likely reached by early afternoon. As large
    scale ascent ahead of the approaching trough overspreads the
    dryline, expect scattered supercells to develop along the dryline in
    Kansas and Oklahoma. Very large to potentially giant hail will be
    possible with these supercells initially. In addition, hodographs
    will support tornadoes. The tornado threat will increase through the
    afternoon and peak during the evening as the low-level jet
    strengthens and low-level shear increases. However, by this time,
    storm mode could be messy which is one factor precluding higher
    probabilities at this time.

    00Z CAM guidance shows a range of solutions including:

    1. Earlier storms as the primary threat.

    2. Delayed dryline initiation with a potential tornado outbreak type
    solution across central/eastern Kansas and central/eastern Oklahoma.

    3. A combination of both solutions.

    The uncertainty in guidance at this time precludes a moderate risk,
    but higher probabilities may be needed when a more favored solution
    becomes more clear, especially if one of the higher-end scenarios
    appears likely.

    ..Bentley.. 05/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun May 18 17:34:13 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 181734
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 181732

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1232 PM CDT Sun May 18 2025

    Valid 191200Z - 201200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN PLAINS INTO THE OZARKS...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM MIDDLE
    TENNESSEE INTO SOUTH CAROLINA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms with all severe weather hazards are expected from the central/southern Plains into the Ozarks on Monday.

    ...Central/Southern Plains to the Mid-Mississippi Valley...

    An uncertain and potentially messy convective scenario is apparent
    across the region on Monday. An upper trough over the southern
    Rockies will become negatively tilted as it ejects across the
    central/southern Plains toward the Mid-MS Valley. As this occurs, a southwesterly 500 mb jet streak around 70-80 kt will overspread the
    region. By early evening and into the overnight hours, an 850-700 mb
    low-level jet will increase to around 45-55 kt.

    At the surface, a somewhat elongated low will extend from central NE
    into western KS/OK, with some forecast guidance suggesting a
    secondary low pressure center developing over northwest OK during
    late afternoon/early evening. At midday, a dryline will extend
    southward from central KS into western OK and central TX while a
    cold front develop east/southwest across NE and western KS. A warm
    front will extend from southeast NE into northern MO and then
    eastward into the Lower OH Valley. The warm front is not forecast to
    move much through the forecast period. Between these surface
    boundaries, a moisture-rich boundary layer will be in place with mid
    60s to low 70s F dewpoints across a broad zone from eastern KS/OK/TX
    toward the Mid-South. A plume of steep midlevel lapse rates atop
    this moist boundary layer will result in strong destabilization by
    early afternoon, with MLCAPE around 2500-3500 J/kg common.
    Vertically veering, supercell wind profiles, becoming
    elongated/straight above 2-3 km will be present. Low-level
    hodographs initially will be somewhat small, but should become
    enlarged as the low-level jet increases toward evening.

    Capping is expected to erode by early to mid afternoon across the
    region. Convective evolution is uncertain. Most guidance develops
    quite a bit of thunderstorms rather early in the afternoon across
    portions of the Ozarks where 850 mb warm air advection will be
    maximized. While initial supercells could be possible, cell
    interactions and consolidation could result in some upscale
    development. Regardless, this initial activity will pose an
    all-hazards severe risk.

    Additional supercells are likely to develop along the surface
    dryline from central/eastern KS/OK where strong heating along/to the
    west of the boundary is expected. Convergence along the dryline is
    not forecast to be overly strong as low-level flow appears to remain
    more southerly rather than southeasterly given a lack of stronger
    surface cyclogenesis. This could result in a messy storm mode due to
    storm interactions. Nevertheless, strong instability, very steep
    lapse rates, and a favorably sheared environment will support
    significant severe storms pose an all-hazards severe risk. With
    time and an increasing low-level jet, one or more linear bands may
    develop across eastern KS/OK and move into MO/AR during the
    nighttime hours. A corridor of greater risk potential is possible
    somewhere across central/eastern OK/KS but uncertainty remains too
    great at this time for a categorical outlook upgrade.

    ...Middle TN into parts of SC...

    An upper ridge is forecast to be centered over the OH/TN Valley and
    Gulf Coast region, with modest northwesterly flow aloft spreading
    over the Southeast. Most guidance depicts a remnant MCV migrating
    through the northwest flow amid a corridor of strong instability.
    Deep-layer flow will be unidirectional, but speed shear will produce long/straight hodographs, with effective shear magnitudes around
    25-35 kt. Modest midlevel lapse rates nearing 7 C/km, and strong
    surface heating leading to steep low-level lapse rates. Isolated
    large hail and strong/damaging gusts will be possible as convection
    develops southeast across the region through the afternoon.

    ..Leitman.. 05/18/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon May 19 05:58:54 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 190557
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 190556

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1256 AM CDT Mon May 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...OHIO VALLEY...AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are likely across portions of the Ohio Valley, Mid-Mississippi Valley, and Tennessee Valley on Tuesday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will advance east to the TN/OH Valley by Tuesday afternoon/evening. At the surface, a surface low will move from
    northern MO/southern Iowa to the eastern Great Lakes by 12Z
    Wednesday. A cold front will extend south from this surface low and
    move east from the central/southern Plains at the beginning of the
    period to the eastern Great Lakes to Louisiana Coast by 12Z
    Wednesday.

    ...Mid-Mississippi Valley into the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys...
    Remnant Day 1 convection will likely be ongoing at the beginning of
    the period from the Midwest into the Ohio Valley with the potential
    for some ongoing strong to severe storms. One or more outflow
    boundaries will likely be located across the Ohio River region at
    the beginning of the period. 00Z guidance has come into better
    agreement that a mid-level dry slot associated with the mid-level
    jet streak will move quickly across the warm sector during the
    morning. This will allow heating and recovery across most of the
    warm sector, particularly south of the Ohio River. This was the
    primary factor which supported expansion of the Enhanced Risk into
    southern Kentucky.

    Moderate to potentially strong instability is forecast to develop
    across the warm sector by the early afternoon. Thunderstorm
    development will likely occur rather early in the afternoon as
    inhibition will be quickly eroded and upper-level forcing should
    overspread the warm sector during the afternoon. A 60 to 70 knot
    mid-level jet will overspread the warm sector and provide a very
    favorable supercell wind profile across most of the region. Initial
    supercells will pose a threat for all severe weather hazards
    including the potential or strong tornadoes. The uncapped warm
    sector and strong forcing suggest that eventual upscale growth is
    likely into several squall lines/clusters. Severe wind and
    line-embedded tornadoes (particularly where the line orientation
    becomes more favorable to the low-level shear vector) will become
    more likely by the evening as this more linear mode evolves.

    ...Carolinas into southern Virginia...
    A warm front is forecast to lift northward across the region during
    the day, allowing for a corridor of rich boundary-layer moisture to
    spread across parts of SC/NC/western VA. Vertically veering,
    supercell wind profiles along this boundary, and MLCAPE to 1500 J/kg
    MLCAPE is evident in forecast soundings. This could support a few
    strong to severe storms during the late afternoon or evening as
    modest height falls overspread the region.

    ..Bentley.. 05/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon May 19 17:33:18 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 191732
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 191730

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1230 PM CDT Mon May 19 2025

    Valid 201200Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    MID-SOUTH AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are likely across portions of the Mid-South,
    Tennessee Valley, and lower Ohio River Valley on Tuesday, including
    damaging winds and tornadoes, a few of which could be strong.

    ...Mid-South and Tennessee/Lower Ohio Valleys...
    Residual thunderstorms and associated cloud cover are expected to be
    ongoing across the Mid-South to lower Ohio Valley Tuesday morning,
    with the early day extensiveness of these storms, and related outflow/differential heating, to be key factors, and points of
    uncertainty, regarding later-day severe potential. This will
    especially be the case with northward extent toward the Ohio River
    and northern parts of the Cumberland Plateau.

    On the south/southwest edge of this early day activity, relatively
    rapid air mass recovery and destabilization can be expected, owing
    to sustained low-level moisture transport from the southwest in
    tandem with cloud breaks and an advancing mid-level dry slot. This
    will be as an upper low shifts northeastward over the middle
    Missouri Valley and Upper Midwest, with a cyclonically curved
    mid/upper-level jet streak overspreading the warm sector, which
    could be convectively contaminated near/north of the Ohio River. At
    least moderate buoyancy is forecast to develop across the
    unperturbed and weakly capped warm sector by early afternoon.

    It should be noted that multiple sub-regional areas, particularly
    across central/eastern portions of Kentucky and Tennessee, could
    receive multiple repeat-rounds of severe storms on Tuesday.
    Thunderstorm development will likely occur rather early in the
    afternoon as inhibition will be quickly eroded and dynamic forcing
    for ascent overspreads the warm sector. Very favorable supercell
    wind profiles will exist across most of the region via the mid-level
    jet and a diurnally sustained 30+ kt low-level jet.

    Initial supercells will pose a threat for all severe weather hazards
    including the potential for strong tornadoes, but a mixed convective
    mode should evolve as upscale growth occurs into multiple clusters.
    Relatively widespread damaging winds, along with a continued
    mixed-mode tornado potential, may occur by late afternoon and
    evening as storms spread east-southeastward toward the Appalachians
    vicinity.

    ...Carolinas and far southern Virginia...
    Weak height falls will begin to influence the region by late in the
    day with a warm front beginning to shift northward across the
    region. At least a conditional or isolated potential for severe
    storms including supercells will exist near the warm front and
    within the immediately adjacent warm sector.

    ..Guyer.. 05/19/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue May 20 05:59:32 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 200559
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 200557

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1257 AM CDT Tue May 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
    CAROLINAS AND THE MID-ATLANTIC/SOUTHEAST STATES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    At least isolated severe storms are possible Wednesday mainly across
    parts of North Carolina and nearby parts of southern Virginia and/or
    eastern South Carolina.

    ...Synopsis...
    An elongated mid-level jet streak will extend from the
    west-northwest to east-southeast on Wednesday morning. A trough will
    amplify across the eastern CONUS with a strengthening mid-level jet
    through the day. A surface low will move slowly across Ohio during
    the period. A secondary surface low is forecast to develop across
    eastern North Carolina and eventually move into the western
    Atlantic. A cold front will extend from this surface low to near the
    Gulf Coast and into southern Texas.

    ...East Coast...
    Upper 60s to low 70s dewpoints are forecast ahead of a cold front at
    12Z Wednesday. This will support moderate instability ahead of the
    front from eastern North Carolina southward. Strong shear will be
    present where the mid-level jet overspreads this instability across
    eastern North Carolina. Within this zone is where the best storm
    organization and locally higher severe potential is located.
    Additional strong to isolated severe storms may be possible along an
    occluded front which extends northward into Virginia and eastern
    West Virginia. Damaging wind gusts will be the primary threat from
    this activity as weak mid-level lapse rates should keep the hail
    threat mostly muted.

    ...Northeast Oklahoma into southern Missouri and northern
    Arkansas...
    Some moisture recovery is forecast across eastern Oklahoma and
    northern Arkansas during the day Wednesday. Most guidance shows a
    strengthening low-level jet across eastern Oklahoma Wednesday
    afternoon/evening with strengthening isentropic ascent. Most CAM
    guidance has limited moisture and therefore no strong convective
    signal across the region. However, the NSSL WRF does have sufficient
    moisture for storms and shows a few supercells which would be
    capable of large hail. A general thunderstorm area has been added to
    address this conditional threat, but the signal is too low
    probability at this time to warrant a marginal risk.

    ..Bentley.. 05/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue May 20 17:23:06 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 201723
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 201721

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1221 PM CDT Tue May 20 2025

    Valid 211200Z - 221200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE UPPER
    OHIO VALLEY...SOUTHERN VIRIGINIA...CENTRAL/EASTERN NORTH
    CAROLINA...NORTH FLORIDA...OZARKS VICINITY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe storms are possible from parts of the
    upper Ohio Valley, southern Virginia/North Carolina and parts of
    North Florida. Additional strong to severe storms are possible from
    parts of the Ozarks into the Mid-South.

    ...Synopsis...
    A compact shortwave trough will move through portions of the
    mid/upper Ohio Valley during the morning/early afternoon. A surface
    low across the lower Great Lakes will move eastward with a weak warm
    front near the OH/PA border. Another surface low will develop along
    the NC/VA border along a wedge front. Weak moisture return is
    possible in parts of the southern Plains ahead of a weak cold front.

    ...Southern Virginia and adjacent North Carolina...
    Cooler air is expected to be in place across the Mid-Atlantic. With
    early day precipitation occurring, this cold air should be
    reinforced. Convective development will likely be focused within the
    higher terrain as well as along a wedge front near the NC/VA border.
    South of the front, 1500-2000 J/kg MLCAPE appears possible. 45-50
    kts off effective shear will promote organized cells capable of
    damaging winds and large hail. Low-level shear will not be very
    strong, but a supercell interacting with the boundary could produce
    a tornado.

    ...Upper Ohio Valley...
    At least muted surface heating is expected in a narrow zone between
    the surface low and warm front. Cold temperatures aloft (-14 to -16
    C at 500 mb) will support 750-1000 J/kg MLCAPE. Deep-layer shear
    will not be overly strong, but 30-35 kts of effective shear could
    support marginally organized storms. Isolated damaging winds as well
    as small to marginally severe hail could occur. A conditional threat
    for a brief tornado exists with a stronger storm near the warm
    front.

    ...Northeast Oklahoma into Ozarks/Mid-South...
    Limited moisture and forcing will limit potential for storms along
    the front during the afternoon. During the evening, a strengthening
    low-level jet, though still modest, will promote some potential for
    elevated storm development. A belt of strong mid-level northwest
    flow is expected to develop later in the day. With steep mid-level
    lapse rates and 50+ kts off effective shear, the stronger storms
    would be capable of large hail.

    ...North Florida...
    Along the southeastward moving cold front, 2000-2500 J/kg MLCAPE is
    probable given low/mid 70s F dewpoints. Effective shear will remain
    strongest behind the boundary, but a cluster or two of storms could
    potentially produce damaging winds.

    ..Wendt.. 05/20/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 21 06:00:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 210600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 210559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Wed May 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TEST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe storms are possible across parts of the southern High
    Plains on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level ridge will amplify somewhat as it shifts east across the
    Rockies. Northwest flow aloft will be present across the High Plains
    with weak southeasterly upslope flow at the surface. Lee troughing
    will begin during the period which will lead to some strengthening
    of the low-level flow.

    ...Southern Plains Vicinity...
    Elevated thunderstorms may be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    across Oklahoma within a zone of isentropic ascent. Destabilization
    south of this cluster may support strengthening through the morning
    and into the afternoon with additional storms possible on the
    western flank. Isolated severe wind gusts and large hail will be
    possible from this activity.

    Farther west, isolated storms are expected to develop along the
    dryline in the southern High Plains from Southwest Oklahoma to West
    Texas. Storms will likely initiate within the hot, well-mixed
    airmass and eventually move into better instability with eastward
    extent. Shear is forecast to be somewhat marginal at this time which
    may limit storm organization and a greater severe weather threat.

    ...Southeast Florida Peninsula...
    A mid-level shortwave trough will move across the Florida Peninsula
    on Thursday. 500mb temperatures will cool to around -10C.
    Strengthening flow aloft, with the associated mid-level shortwave
    trough, will provide effective shear around 35 to 40 knots. The cool
    mid-level temperatures will aid in development of moderate
    instability across the region by early afternoon. Thunderstorm
    development is expected along the east-coast sea breeze during the
    afternoon with some rotating updrafts possible. Isolated large hail
    and damaging wind gusts will be possible from this activity.

    ..Bentley.. 05/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 21 06:07:43 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 210607
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 210605

    Day 2 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0105 AM CDT Wed May 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND SOUTHEAST FLORIDA....

    CORRECTED FOR MISSING HEADLINE INFORMATION

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe storms are possible across parts of the southern High
    Plains on Thursday.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level ridge will amplify somewhat as it shifts east across the
    Rockies. Northwest flow aloft will be present across the High Plains
    with weak southeasterly upslope flow at the surface. Lee troughing
    will begin during the period which will lead to some strengthening
    of the low-level flow.

    ...Southern Plains Vicinity...
    Elevated thunderstorms may be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    across Oklahoma within a zone of isentropic ascent. Destabilization
    south of this cluster may support strengthening through the morning
    and into the afternoon with additional storms possible on the
    western flank. Isolated severe wind gusts and large hail will be
    possible from this activity.

    Farther west, isolated storms are expected to develop along the
    dryline in the southern High Plains from Southwest Oklahoma to West
    Texas. Storms will likely initiate within the hot, well-mixed
    airmass and eventually move into better instability with eastward
    extent. Shear is forecast to be somewhat marginal at this time which
    may limit storm organization and a greater severe weather threat.

    ...Southeast Florida Peninsula...
    A mid-level shortwave trough will move across the Florida Peninsula
    on Thursday. 500mb temperatures will cool to around -10C.
    Strengthening flow aloft, with the associated mid-level shortwave
    trough, will provide effective shear around 35 to 40 knots. The cool
    mid-level temperatures will aid in development of moderate
    instability across the region by early afternoon. Thunderstorm
    development is expected along the east-coast sea breeze during the
    afternoon with some rotating updrafts possible. Isolated large hail
    and damaging wind gusts will be possible from this activity.

    ..Bentley.. 05/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed May 21 17:28:46 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 211728
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 211727

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1227 PM CDT Wed May 21 2025

    Valid 221200Z - 231200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms are possible across parts of the southern Plains tomorrow/Thursday, with large hail the main threat. A few instances
    of 2+ inch diameter hail are possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    Broad northwesterly flow will prevail across much of the eastern
    U.S. as a mid-level trough ejects into the Atlantic, an upper ridge
    builds over the central CONUS, and a pronounced mid-level impulse
    traverses the northern Rockies tomorrow (Thursday). A surface low
    will track along the Mid-Atlantic Coastline while surface high
    pressure overspreads much of the Midwest into the Southeast, and lee
    troughing prevails across the southern Plains. Thunderstorms are
    likely along the East Coast and the FL Peninsula, in association
    with the departing upper trough. Storms developing ahead of a
    southward-sagging cold front in FL have the best potential for
    becoming strong to locally severe over the East Coast. At least
    scattered thunderstorms are also likely across the Southern Plains, northwestward into the northern Rockies, given lee troughing and
    low-level upslope flow. Thunderstorms developing along a baroclinic
    zone along the Red River will benefit from strong instability and
    adequate wind shear, and will have the potential to become severe.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Elevated thunderstorms are expected to develop in central OK within
    a warm-air advection regime, to the north of a west-to-east oriented
    baroclinic boundary, which is expected to be situated along the Red
    River during the morning/early afternoon hours. Through the day,
    storms are expected to propagate southward toward a surface-based
    airmass over northern TX, where upper 60s/low 70s F surface
    dewpoints beneath 8 C/km mid-level lapse rates will contribute to
    2500-4000 J/kg MLCAPE. Low-level southerly flow, quickly veering to northwesterly and strengthening with height, will result in
    elongated hodographs with some low-level curvature near the
    baroclinic boundary. As such, the overall CAPE/shear parameter space
    will support supercells with large to very large hail potential. If
    a supercell can anchor along the baroclinic boundary, a tornado will
    also be possible.

    ...East Florida Peninsula...
    A southward-sagging cold front will begin to stall across the FL
    Peninsula during the afternoon hours, preceded by rich low-level
    moisture beneath 6.5-7.5 C/km mid-level lapse rates, which will
    boost MLCAPE over 2500 J/kg. Modest northwesterly mid-level flow
    impinging on the peninsula will encourage deep-layer speed shear
    over 40 kts, that in tandem with moderate to strong instability,
    will support multicells and transient supercells by afternoon. Large
    hail and strong, damaging wind gusts are the primary threats with
    the most intense storms.

    ...Northern Rockies...
    Scattered thunderstorm development is expected across central and
    northern ID into southwestern MT as strong forcing for ascent with
    the passing mid-level trough overspreads a deep, mixed boundary
    layer during the afternoon. Forecast soundings show inverted-v
    profiles extending up to 500 mb. As such, some downward momentum
    transport via evaporative cooling should encourage stronger wind
    gusts with the deeper storm cores. However, confidence is not high
    enough for severe gusts to introduce Category 1/Marginal risk
    probabilities at this time.

    ..Squitieri.. 05/21/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 22 06:04:08 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 220602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 220600

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0100 AM CDT Thu May 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHEAST COLORADO...SOUTHWEST NEBRASKA...AND NORTHWEST KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe storms are expected across portions of the central
    Plains on Friday with more isolated strong to severe storms possible
    across portions of western Texas and southeast Florida.

    ...Synopsis...
    A relatively flat ridge will be present across the central Rockies
    on Friday. Moderate flow across the higher terrain will result in
    lee cyclogenesis across the central High Plains. A dryline will
    extend from the surface low across western Kansas and into the Texas
    Panhandle and West Texas.

    ...Northeast Colorado, southwest Nebraska, and northwest Kansas... Strengthening southerly flow will back through the day with
    consistent boundary layer moistening ahead of the a dryline across
    northeast Kansas. This will likely result in moderate instability
    with steep lapse rates extending from the surface to the mid-levels
    within the strongly mixed zone along the dryline by mid to late
    afternoon. Upper-level forcing will be somewhat nebulous, but as the
    low-level flow backs and strengthens, increased isentropic ascent
    and upslope flow should support scattered storm development during
    the evening. Strong shear will support supercells capable of large
    hail and severe wind gusts.

    ...West Texas into the Texas Panhandle...
    Hot conditions will develop across West Texas on Friday with a very
    deeply mixed boundary layer. Storms will likely develop along the
    dryline during the late afternoon to early evening with some
    organization. Storm mode is the primary factor limiting greater
    probabilities at this time. Modest shear may support some supercell
    structures amid moderate to strong shear. However, the deeply mixed
    boundary layer will promote strong downdrafts which may support
    rather quick clustering and a more multicell mode. A zone from near
    Midland to Wichita Falls may eventually need a slight risk of storm
    mode remains favorable for a more widespread severe hail/wind gust
    threat.

    ...Eastern Kansas, Oklahoma and northern Texas into Arkansas...
    Isolated elevated thunderstorms will be possible across portions of
    central Oklahoma into central Kansas on Friday morning. However, the
    low-level jet will not be as strong and storm coverage/intensity may
    not be that great. By Friday night, more widespread elevated
    thunderstorms are likely across eastern Kansas and into parts of
    Oklahoma, southwest Missouri, and western Arkansas. Large hail may
    be possible from this overnight elevated activity.

    ...Eastern Florida...
    Relatively cool mid-level temperatures will be present across
    Florida today. Moderate instability will be in place south of a
    stalled frontal zone across central Florida. Thunderstorms are
    expected along the sea breeze near the east coast of Florida. Modest
    mid-level flow (25 to 30 knots) will result in sufficient shear for
    some multicell storm organization. Isolated large hail and damaging
    wind gusts will be the primary threats.

    ..Bentley.. 05/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu May 22 17:30:27 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 221730
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 221728

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1228 PM CDT Thu May 22 2025

    Valid 231200Z - 241200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR PORTIONS OF
    THE CENTRAL INTO SOUTHERN PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    A few severe storms are expected across portions of the central into
    southern Plains on Friday, with large hail and severe gusts the main
    threats. More isolated strong to severe storms remain possible
    across portions of western Texas and southeast Florida.

    ...Synopsis...
    A mid-level trough will eject into the Atlantic as upper ridging
    prevails over the central CONUS and a mid-level trough impinges on
    the Interior West tomorrow (Friday). An embedded mid-level impulse
    will crest the central U.S. ridge, encouraging surface low
    development over the southern Plains. Rich low-level moisture will
    cyclonically pivot around the low through the forecast period, with
    at least some of this moisture reaching the Colorado Front Range by
    late afternoon. Strong to severe thunderstorms should develop over
    the central High Plains during the afternoon, with additional
    development possible overnight across the central to southern Plains
    at the nose of a low-level jet. A few strong storms also remain
    possible over eastern parts of the Florida Peninsula along
    sea-breeze boundaries.

    ...Central High Plains (Late Afternoon and Evening)...
    By afternoon, southeasterly upslope flow along the higher terrain,
    from the Colorado Front Range to the WY/NE border, will advect
    adequate moisture that is pivoting northward around the surface low.
    At least mid 50s F surface dewpoints, beneath 9 C/km low and
    mid-level lapse rates, will contribute to 1000-2000 J/kg MLCAPE.
    40-50 kts of northwesterly 500 mb flow from the upper ridge,
    overspreading weaker southeasterly flow, will support elongated,
    mostly straight hodographs and corresponding 35-40 kts of effective
    bulk shear. Storms that form and move off of the higher terrain
    should be splitting supercells with mainly a large hail threat,
    perhaps accompanied by severe gusts as well. Given such steep lapse
    rates through a deep-layer of the troposphere, and elongated
    hodographs, 2+ inch diameter hail is possible and a tornado cannot
    be ruled out.

    ...Southern High Plains (Late Afternoon and Evening)...
    By afternoon peak heating, robust mixing within the boundary layer
    will encourage the eastward advancement of the dryline over western
    TX. Resultant low-level convergence along the dryline will support
    the development of high-based storms atop a surface airmass with mid
    90s/upper 50s F temperatures/dewpoints. 8-9 C/km lapse rates through
    most of the troposphere will boost MLCAPE to 3000 J/kg, while
    gradual veering with height of the vertical wind profiles supports
    over 35+ kts of effective bulk shear. Isolated multicell complexes
    should develop, and given poor low-level shear and high evaporative
    cooling potential, these storms should be outflow dominant. A couple
    instances of large hail may accompany the stronger storm cores at
    the beginning of their life-cycles, followed by the potential for a
    severe gust or two when cold pools/outflow becomes dominant. Storms
    should diminish during the evening as the boundary layer stabilizes
    and the dryline retreats westward.

    ...Central into the Southern Plains (Overnight)...
    Considerable amounts of convective inhibition should be in place
    across much of the central into southern Plains tomorrow afternoon
    and evening, casting doubt on the persistence of the central High
    Plains supercells into this region overnight. However, even if the
    High Plains supercells dissipate, additional storm development is
    likely overnight. A 40-50 kt southwesterly low-level jet, centered
    at about 850 mb in altitude, is expected to develop over the
    southern Plains, with the terminus positioned over southern KS
    between 00-06Z. Elevated storms should develop along the terminus,
    atop the inversion layer (i.e. above 850 mb). 9+ C/km 850-500 mb
    lapse rates and elongated hodographs will support supercell
    structures with a large hail risk, though upscale growth into an MCS
    is possible, with a continued risk for hail and perhaps a few severe
    gusts if a strong enough cold pool can develop.

    ...Eastern Florida Peninsula (Afternoon)...
    By late morning into early afternoon, robust surface heating will
    support the mixing and destabilization of a moist boundary layer,
    with near 70 F dewpoints beneath 7+ C/km mid-level lapse rates
    resulting in 2000-3000 J/kg SBCAPE. The strong surface heating will
    encourage the generation and onshore movement of sea-breeze
    boundaries, which in tandem with the heating will support
    thunderstorm initiation. Modest westerly mid-level flow
    overspreading this environment will encourage 30+ kts of effective
    bulk shear (modestly elongated, straight hodographs), supporting the
    potential for multicellular development, along with an isolated wind
    gust/hail threat with the stronger storms.

    ..Squitieri.. 05/22/2025

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri May 23 06:04:54 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 230602
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 230601

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0101 AM CDT Fri May 23 2025

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND WESTERN OZARKS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms are likely across part of the southern Plains and
    western Ozarks on Saturday. Severe wind gusts, large hail and a
    couple tornadoes will be possible. Hailstones greater than 2 inches
    in diameter could also occur. Marginally severe storms will also be
    possible across parts of the central High Plains, and Southeast.

    ...Southern and Central Plains...
    At mid-levels, a low will move slowly eastward across the
    Intermountain West on Saturday, as a ridge moves eastward across the south-central U.S. At the surface, a low will remain over west
    Texas, with a moist and unstable airmass extending from the southern
    Plains into the lower Mississippi Valley. Elevated convection is
    forecast over part of the southern Plains and Ozarks Saturday
    morning, but this convection should move southeastward during the
    day, allowing for moderate to strong instability to develop over
    parts of Oklahoma and north Texas by afternoon. Scattered
    thunderstorms are expected to form during the late afternoon within
    this maximum of instability. Some of the storms could be severe.

    Model forecasts suggest that a pocket of strong instability will
    develop by Saturday afternoon across parts of southwest and central
    Oklahoma. ECMWF and NAM forecast soundings near the expected maximum
    of instability increase MLCAPE into the 4000 to 5000 J/kg range. 0-6
    km shear is forecast in the 35 to 40 knot range, with 700-500 mb
    lapse rates around 9 C/km. This thermodynamic environment will be
    favorable for large hail with supercells that form in the late
    afternoon. The more intense cores could produce hailstones greater
    than 2 inches in diameter. As a low-level jet strengthens across
    central Oklahoma, NAM forecast soundings increase 0-3 km
    storm-relative helicity to over 400 m2/s2. This suggest an isolated
    tornado threat will be possible with the more dominant supercells. A wind-damage threat should also develop. A cluster of strong to
    severe storms is expected to move eastward toward the Ozarks during
    the evening.

    ...Southern and Central High Plains...
    A mid-level anticyclonic flow pattern is forecast across the Rockies
    and High Plains on Saturday. The western edge of a moist airmass
    will be in place from west Texas north-northwestward into eastern
    Colorado. As surface temperatures warm during the day, cells will
    initiate in the higher terrain of southern and central Colorado and
    in eastern New Mexico. This convection will spread eastward into the
    High Plains. The environment over the southern and central High
    Plains is forecast to have steep mid-level lapse rates and moderate
    deep-layer shear. This, along with sufficient instability, should be
    enough for a marginal severe threat during the late afternoon and
    early evening. Hail and severe gusts will be the primary threats.

    ...Southeast...
    West-northwest mid-level flow is forecast over the southeastern U.S.
    on Saturday. At the surface, a moist airmass will be in place, with
    dewpoints in the upper 60 to lower 70s F. As instability increases
    during the day, isolated thunderstorm development is expected along
    corridors of enhanced low-level convergence. Although forcing will
    be weak, enough directional shear in the low to mid-levels should
    exist for a marginal severe threat. Hail and isolated damaging wind
    gusts will be possible.

    ..Broyles.. 05/23/2025

    $$

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