• DAY3SVR: Nws Storm Prediction Center Norman Ok

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Feb 22 18:43:40 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 221843
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 221842

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1242 PM CST Sun Feb 22 2026

    Valid 241200Z - 251200Z

    ...NO THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

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

    ...Synopsis...
    A vigorous mid/upper-level shortwave trough is forecast to move
    southeastward from the northern Plains into the Great Lakes and Ohio
    Valley on Tuesday. This system will be accompanied by a deepening
    surface low and trailing cold front. While this system may be
    accompanied by shallow/weak convection, very meager
    moisture/instability should limit thunderstorm potential.

    Upstream, a mid/upper-level shortwave trough will move into parts of
    the Pacific Northwest, helping to dampen an upper ridge that will
    initially be in place over the region. Rain and gusty winds will
    accompany this system across coastal OR and northern CA, but
    thunderstorm potential appears low due to negligible instability.

    ..Dean.. 02/22/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 23 07:53:44 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 230753
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 230752

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0152 AM CST Mon Feb 23 2026

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible late Wednesday night into early
    Thursday morning across portions of the Ozarks east into the
    Tennessee Valley.

    ... Discussion ...

    A fast moving, positively tilted shortwave trough embedded in the
    broad northwest flow across the US will move from the Interior
    Pacific Northwest to Iowa/Missouri during the forecast period. At
    the surface, southerly winds to the east of a broad lee trough will
    begin drawing warm air and Gulf moisture northward through the day
    on Wednesday, ultimately aiding the development of a
    northwest-to-southeast oriented warm front stretching from Nebraska
    to Alabama/Georgia.

    In response to the approaching shortwave trough, southwesterly
    low-level winds will strengthen across Texas into the Ohio Valley
    overnight Wednesday into Thursday. Precipitation will likely develop
    in response to this increasing moist isentropic ascent. Forecast
    soundings from the Ozarks into the Tennessee Valley indicate
    sufficient moistening just above the boundary layer to support up to
    500 J/kg of elevated instability and the potential for a few
    thunderstorms. As of now, the weak instability should limit any
    severe threat with these elevated storms.

    ..Marsh.. 02/23/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Feb 23 19:06:19 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 231906
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 231905

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0105 PM CST Mon Feb 23 2026

    Valid 251200Z - 261200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible late Wednesday night into early
    Thursday morning across portions of the Ozarks east into the
    Tennessee Valley.

    ...Synopsis and Discussion...
    A shortwave trough is forecast to progress quickly from the Pacific
    Northwest in the central Plains/Mid MO Valley on Wednesday, moving
    within the broadly cyclonic upper flow expected to be in place
    across the CONUS. Deepening surface lee troughing is anticipated
    ahead of this wave, with cyclogenesis eventually yielding a low that
    progresses across the TX Panhandle during the evening and along the
    Red River overnight.

    A moistening warm sector will precede this surface low and its
    parent shortwave, with mid 50s dewpoints reaching across much of
    eastern OK and southern/central AR by early Thursday morning. 60s
    dewpoints will likely remain confined farther south along the TX
    Coast, with warm temperatures aloft precluding deep convection
    throughout the warm sector. However, strengthening low to mid-level
    flow is anticipated throughout the warm sector, resulting in
    moderate to strong warm-air advection across the frontal zone
    extending northeastward from the Red River surface low. Showers and
    a few thunderstorms are possible across the Mid-South and TN Valley
    as limited but sufficient buoyancy develops amid the moistening low
    to mid-levels and cool temperatures aloft. A few thunderstorms are
    also possible immediately ahead of a weak triple point low farther
    west in the vicinity of the confluence of the MS and OH rivers.

    ..Mosier.. 02/23/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 24 08:31:23 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 240831
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 240830

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0230 AM CST Tue Feb 24 2026

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible across portions of the Southeast on
    Thursday, the strongest of which may be capable of producing a
    couple of strong wind gusts.

    ... Discussion ...

    The upper-air pattern across the United States will remain best
    characterized by broad, fast, northwest flow for most of the
    forecast period. Within this flow, the primary focus will be on a
    shortwave trough forecast to drop southward from the mid-Missouri
    Valley into the Southeast. Recent guidance suggests trend toward a
    weaker, more dampened trough as it dives south of the main belt of
    mid-level flow.

    In response to this weaker, more detached forcing, a surface low is
    forecast to develop much farther south than originally anticipated,
    likely across the lower Mississippi Valley and northern Gulf Coast
    states. Recent model trends indicate this cyclone will not develop
    as deeply, resulting in a notably weaker low-level wind field across
    the warm sector. Consequently, the associated surface cold front
    appears likely to merely sag southward rather than being dynamically
    driven, as the lack of robust cyclogenesis and a weaker trough limit
    frontal acceleration.

    Despite weaker forcing and diminished convergence along the sagging
    front, some guidance suggests that buoyancy profiles may be slightly
    improved compared to previous outlooks, though they remain meager
    overall. Moisture return should yield surface dewpoints in the 50Fs
    to low 60Fs, which may support a narrow, forced convective band.
    Kinematically, forecast soundings indicate that low-level curvature
    is less than previously forecast, limiting the localized tornado
    potential, but hodographs remain quite long due to the persistence
    of stronger flow aloft. This maintains sufficient deep-layer shear
    for organized linear structures capable of isolated damaging wind
    gusts. However, given the weakening trends in forcing and low-level
    kinematics, confidence remains too low to introduce unconditional 5%
    severe probabilities at this time.

    ..Marsh.. 02/24/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Feb 24 19:18:56 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 241918
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 241918

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0118 PM CST Tue Feb 24 2026

    Valid 261200Z - 271200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible across portions of the Southeast on
    Thursday, the strongest of which may be capable of producing a
    couple of strong wind gusts.

    ...Synopsis...
    A weak frontal boundary will drift southward across the TN Valley
    into the Southeast on Thursday as a low-amplitude, positively tilted
    mid-level trough overspreads the MS Valley. Cooler temperatures
    aloft will gradually overspread the warm sector through the day over
    the Southeast, characterized by modest low-level moisture. Tall,
    thin buoyancy profiles in forecast soundings suggest that MLCAPE
    should remain at or below 500 J/kg in most places. Low-level WAA
    atop the southward sagging surface frontal boundary should serve as
    the impetus for isolated instances of convective initiation by
    Thursday evening. Strong westerly flow aloft will yield straight,
    elongated hodographs, so a couple of strong wind gusts cannot be
    ruled out with the more organized storms. However, modest buoyancy
    and forcing for ascent suggest that any severe threat that
    materializes, while technically non-zero, will be too sparse for the introduction of severe probabilities this outlook.

    ..Squitieri.. 02/24/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 25 08:26:28 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 250826
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 250825

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0225 AM CST Wed Feb 25 2026

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible across the Southeast on Friday.
    Organized severe thunderstorms are not expected.

    ... Discussion ...

    Showers and a few thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at the start
    of the forecast period across portions of the Southeast along and
    south of a slow moving surface front. These showers and
    thunderstorms will likely be aided by a modest low-level
    jet/warm-air advection regime. These thunderstorms will persist into
    early Friday afternoon within a moist, uncapped environment and
    broad troughing aloft. Meager instability (on the order of less than
    500 J/kg), decreasing convergence along the surface front, and
    generally weakening kinematic field should preclude any organized
    severe potential.

    ..Marsh.. 02/25/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Feb 25 19:21:33 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 251921
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 251920

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0120 PM CST Wed Feb 25 2026

    Valid 271200Z - 281200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    General thunderstorms are likely over parts of the Southeast on
    Friday. Severe thunderstorms are not currently forecast.

    ...Synopsis...
    A shortwave trough will move from the southern Plains toward the
    northern Gulf of America on Friday, with cooling aloft overspreading
    much of the Southeast. At the surface, a prominent ridge will extend
    from the Mid Atlantic across the TN and into the lower MS Valley,
    with a cold front roughly from SC into LA.

    Near this front, rain and a few thunderstorms are likely to be
    ongoing from southern LA/MS/AL/GA into northern FL Friday morning.
    While clouds and precipitation may hamper heating, at least a few
    hundred J/kg MLCAPE appears likely given lower 60s F dewpoints and a
    plume of low-level theta-e extending out of the northern Gulf and
    across the FL Panhandle/southern AL/southern GA.

    Given questionable destabilization and relatively weak boundary
    layer winds, potential for isolated strong/severe storms are not
    currently depicted.

    ..Jewell.. 02/25/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 26 08:31:06 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 260831
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 260830

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0230 AM CST Thu Feb 26 2026

    Valid 281200Z - 011200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible across the Florida Peninsula and
    across northern California and southern Oregon on Saturday.
    Additional thunderstorms may be possible across the Southern Plains
    early Sunday morning.

    ... Discussion ...

    A low-amplitude ridge across the Great Basin/Southwest and broad
    troughing across the eastern US will result in a continuation of the
    persistent northwest flow regime across the central US. To the west,
    moist southwesterly flow across northern California and southern
    Oregon will slowly shift south as a Pacific low approaches the
    coast.

    At the surface, a weak front will sag south across the Florida
    peninsula, while a return to southerly winds across the southern
    Plains will initiate low-level moisture return into Oklahoma.
    Coincident, an arctic front will push south through the central
    Plains into the southern Plains as an arctic high builds into the
    upper Midwest.

    ... Florida Peninsula ...

    A remnant frontal boundary will linger across the central Florida
    peninsula, where conditions will remain favorable for at least
    isolated thunderstorms. To the south of the front, surface
    temperatures should warm into the upper-60Fs to low-70Fs with
    surface dewpoints in the low-to-mid-60Fs. This should yield MUCAPE
    between 1000-1500 J/kg.

    While forecast hodographs are expected to lengthen as compared to
    the prior day, supporting some storm organization, several limiting
    factors exist. Weak mid-level lapse rates and poor low-level
    convergence cast doubt on the overall coverage of thunderstorm
    development. Additionally, forecast soundings suggest subsidence
    across portions of the peninsula during peak heating, which would
    further limit convective development.

    ... Northern California and Southern Oregon ...

    Moist southwesterly advection will increase/persist ahead of an
    approaching Pacific trough. Although instability is rather limited,
    it does appear to be non-zero. The combination of a moistening
    troposphere, increased ascent with the approaching trough, and
    non-zero instability may support a couple of thunderstorms.

    ... Southern Plains ...

    Moist warm-air advection is anticipated to become established
    Saturday night as a southerly low-level jet develops across the
    Plains. Increasing moisture return will drive surface dewpoints
    perhaps as high as the upper-50Fs or even low-60Fs. As the arctic
    front slows and encounters this moistening airmass, elevated
    thunderstorms are expected to develop within the warm-air advection
    regime.

    Kinematic profiles will feature very long hodographs and would
    support updraft organization with potential for at least marginally
    severe hail. However, this threat is highly conditioned on the
    quality and magnitude of the moisture return. At this time will
    defer the introduction of hail probabilities to subsequent outlooks.
    However, if upper-50F dewpoints are realized, enough elevated
    instability may develop to support the introduction of hail
    probabilities at a later time.

    ..Marsh.. 02/26/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Feb 26 19:28:09 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 261928
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 261926

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0126 PM CST Thu Feb 26 2026

    Valid 281200Z - 011200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible across the Florida Peninsula and
    across northern California and southern Oregon on Saturday.
    Additional thunderstorms may be possible across the Southern Plains
    Saturday evening into early Sunday morning.

    ...Synopsis...
    A persistent northwest flow regime will continue across the CONUS
    well into the weekend with continued upper ridging over the
    Southwest/West Coast and the maintenance of a long-wave trough over
    the East. Within this flow regime, several embedded disturbances
    will support areas of convection, namely over the Florida Peninsula
    and across northern California and adjacent portions of OR and NV.
    Isolated thunderstorms are also possible across parts of the
    southern Plains into the Ozark Plateau within a low-level warm
    advection regime.

    ...FL Peninsula...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms appear likely through the day
    along the FL Peninsula as ascent associated with a de-amplifying
    upper wave persists over a buoyant and weakly capped environment.
    Although some hodograph elongation is noted in recent forecast
    soundings, confidence in updraft intensity is limited due to modest
    mid-level lapse rates and weak low-level convergence/forcing for
    ascent. Any appreciable severe threat would most likely manifest
    along the FL east coast where sea-breeze convergence may focus
    thunderstorm development, but confidence in this potential is too
    limited at this time for risk probabilities.

    ...Oklahoma into the Ozark Plateau...
    Zonal flow across the central Rockies will promote steady lee
    troughing along the High Plains through late Saturday night. In
    response, warm/moist air advection is expected to increase through
    the lowest few kilometers as a plume of low to mid-50s dewpoints
    spreads north into OK within a southerly flow regime. Isentropic
    ascent within a weak deformation zone at around 850 mb will likely
    be the impetus for thunderstorm development within the destabilizing
    air mass by Saturday evening. The quality of moisture
    return/destabilization remains uncertain due to notable spread in
    guidance, which lends low confidence in overall storm coverage and
    intensity at this time. However, thunder probabilities were maintained/introduced where agreement between long-range ensembles
    and extended-range CAMs appears greatest.

    ...Northern CA into OR and NV...
    A shortwave trough is forecast to crest the axis of the persistent
    upper ridge in place along the CA coast. Cold mid-level temperatures
    under the upper low coupled with an influx of Pacific moisture
    through a deep layer should support convective elements within
    broader precipitation bands. Forecast soundings suggest buoyancy
    profiles will remain too limited to support intense convection,
    which should preclude a severe threat.

    ..Moore.. 02/26/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 27 07:54:11 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 270754
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 270753

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0153 AM CST Fri Feb 27 2026

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible on Sunday across parts of south
    Florida, the southern and central Plains, and in northern
    California.

    ...DISCUSSION...
    A subtle mid-level trough is forecast to move eastward across the
    Florida Peninsula on Sunday, as a diffuse cold front stalls in
    south-central Florida. Thunderstorms will be possible near the front
    in the afternoon. Further west into the southern and central Plains, thunderstorms will be possible as surface temperatures warm during
    the day near and to the north of a front from parts of Oklahoma
    northward into Kansas and southwest Missouri. Finally, isolated
    diurnal storms will also be possible on Sunday in parts of northern
    California. No severe threat is expected across the continental U.S.
    Sunday and Sunday night.

    ..Broyles.. 02/27/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Feb 27 19:19:42 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 271919
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 271918

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0118 PM CST Fri Feb 27 2026

    Valid 011200Z - 021200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible on Sunday across parts of south
    Florida, the southern and central Plains, and in northern
    California.

    ...Synopsis...
    The mean northwesterly flow regime currently over the CONUS will
    gradually begin to shift east through the late weekend and into
    early next week as a somewhat more potent upper-level wave
    approaches the West Coast. Cooling temperatures aloft associated
    with the approaching upper wave will support adequate buoyancy for
    isolated thunderstorms across CA and into OR, NV, and parts of
    southwest ID late Sunday afternoon into the evening hours. Further
    east, strengthening mid-level flow across the central Rockies will
    promote weak lee cyclogenesis in proximity to a residual baroclinic
    zone across the southern Plains. An uptick in low-level winds will
    augment isentropic upglide over the frontal zone across OK into
    eastern KS, southwest MO, and northwest AR. Strong mid-level winds
    atop strong veering in the lowest few kilometers will conditionally
    support organized convection; however, most guidance suggests
    buoyancy profiles will remain fairly limited (less than 500 J/kg
    MUCAPE per GEFS/ECENS output) due to meager moisture quality. This
    limits confidence in any severe threat at this time. Isolated
    thunderstorms may linger across southern FL where an unstable, but
    weakly capped, environment should be in place as a weak frontal
    boundary drifts south.

    ..Moore.. 02/27/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 28 08:10:17 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 280810
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 280809

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0209 AM CST Sat Feb 28 2026

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible on Monday across parts of the central
    U.S. and from the Intermountain West into the central Rockies.

    ...Western Oklahoma/Eastern Texas Panhandle/Far Southern Kansas...
    A positively tilted mid-level trough will move eastward across
    southern California on Monday. A fetch of mid-level
    west-southwesterly flow will be in place from the Desert Southwest
    into the south-central U.S. At the surface, moisture advection
    within south to southeasterly flow will continue across the southern
    and central Plains. As surface temperatures warm during the day, an
    axis of moderate instability is forecast to develop across
    west-central and northwest Texas. This instability should spread
    northward across the eastern Texas Panhandle and western Oklahoma
    during the early to mid evening. Although weak low-level convergence
    should be in place near the instability axis, forecast soundings
    suggest that a strong capping inversion will inhibit convective
    development Monday evening. Although there may be a low-end
    conditional threat, will hold off an introducing a threat area due
    the strong capping inversion that is forecast. Further northeast,
    elevated storms are expected to develop after midnight from
    north-central Kansas into western Missouri, along the northern edge
    of a pronounced 40 to 50 knot low-level jet.

    ..Broyles.. 02/28/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Feb 28 19:07:50 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 281907
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 281906

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0106 PM CST Sat Feb 28 2026

    Valid 021200Z - 031200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Thunderstorms will be possible on Monday and Monday night across
    parts of the central U.S. and from the Intermountain West into the
    central Rockies.

    ...Synopsis...
    A broad fetch of isentropic ascent will likely become established
    across the central U.S. Monday through Monday night as
    south/southwesterly 925-850 mb winds gradually increase in response
    to the approach of an upper wave from the West. While buoyancy
    profiles will likely be fairly modest due to poor mid-level lapse
    rates, adequate low-level moistening should take place to support
    isolated elevated thunderstorms from the southern Plains northward
    into the mid-MS River Valley. Although surface-based buoyancy should
    be maximized across western TX in proximity to a meandering dry
    line/lee trough and south of a weak front, very warm temperatures at
    850 mb/strong capping will subdue convective potential. Across the Intermountain West, cold temperatures aloft associated with the
    upper wave should support isolated lightning flashes.

    ..Moore.. 02/28/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 1 08:21:53 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 010821
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 010820

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0220 AM CST Sun Mar 01 2026

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms will be possible from Tuesday
    into Tuesday night from parts of the southern and central Plains
    eastward into the mid Mississippi Valley. Isolated storms may also
    develop in south Florida.

    ...Southern and Central Plains/Mid Mississippi Valley...
    At mid-levels, a shortwave ridge will move eastward into the Ozarks
    on Tuesday, as flow becomes southwesterly over the south-central
    U.S. Further west, an upper-level trough will move through the Four
    Corners region. At the surface, a moist airmass with surface
    dewpoints in the 50s and 60s F will advect northward across the
    southern Plains and Arklatex. A cold front will move southeastward
    into the central Plains. To the south of the front, an axis of
    instability is forecast to develop in the afternoon from northwest
    Texas into southeast Kansas and the northern Ozarks. The airmass is
    expected to be capped across much of Texas and Oklahoma, although an
    elevated storm or two will be possible Tuesday night. The greatest
    chance for storms will be from eastern Kansas into the northern
    Ozarks, where convective development will be aided by lift
    associated with the exit region of a 40 to 50 knot low-level jet.
    Considerable variance exists among the model solutions concerning
    instability, suggesting that any severe threat will be highly
    conditional. If moisture return ends up being greater than is
    currently forecast, a marginal severe threat may need to be added in
    later outlooks.

    ..Broyles.. 03/01/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 1 19:25:54 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 011925
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 011924

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0124 PM CST Sun Mar 01 2026

    Valid 031200Z - 041200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS NORTHERN
    OKLAHOMA INTO SOUTHERN AND EASTERN KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered thunderstorms, including the potential for a
    few severe thunderstorms, are anticipated Tuesday evening into
    Tuesday night from parts of the southern and central Plains eastward
    into the mid Mississippi Valley. Isolated storms may also develop in
    south Florida.

    ...Synopsis...
    The upper wave currently off the northern CA coast will begin
    ejecting into the Plains through the day Tuesday, reaching the
    mid-Missouri River Valley by early Wednesday morning. At the
    surface, a stalled frontal boundary draped across OK will advance
    northward through the day in response to lee
    cyclogenesis/strengthening southerly flow. Northward moisture return
    into OK and southern KS will occur through the day, which should
    help increase buoyancy along and south of the frontal zone. A
    southward surge of the front is expected after 00z across KS and
    into northwest OK as the surface low develops northeastward in
    tandem with broad-scale ascent associated with the upper trough.
    Most 00z and 12z ensemble solutions depict moderate (40-60%) chances
    for precipitation across northern OK into southern and eastern KS
    between 00-06 UTC as the front pushes southeast. Forecast soundings
    from this region depict sufficient MUCAPE for deep convection, and
    strong flow aloft should provide adequate wind shear for organized thunderstorms with an attendant large hail, and possibly wind,
    threat. Confidence in the degree of destabilization remains somewhat
    low with NAM-based solutions depicting considerable capping and
    drier/cooler conditions overall. However, the ensemble QPF signal
    along the front coupled with reasonable potential for adequate
    buoyancy/shear for organized storms and convective signals in
    extended-range CAMs warrants at least low severe probabilities.

    ..Moore.. 03/01/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 2 08:25:30 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 020825
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 020824

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0224 AM CST Mon Mar 02 2026

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN PLAINS AND WESTERN OZARKS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms with large hail and damaging wind gusts will be
    possible on Wednesday from the southern Plains into the western
    Ozarks. Marginally severe storms will be possible from the northern
    Ozarks into the Ohio Valley.

    ...Southern Plains/Western Ozarks...
    At mid-levels, a shortwave trough will move into the southern and
    central Plains on Wednesday. At the surface, a cold front will
    advance southeastward into the southern Plains and western Ozarks.
    Ahead of the front, surface dewpoints will be in the 60s F. As
    surface temperatures warm during the day across this moist airmass,
    pockets of moderate instability appear likely to develop from
    north-central and northeast Texas into southeastern Oklahoma and
    western Arkansas. As low-level convergence increases near the front
    in the afternoon, scattered thunderstorms are expected to form.
    Isolated thunderstorms will also be possible to the south and east
    of the front over the warm sector. Forecast soundings at 21Z from
    northeast Texas into western Arkansas have MLCAPE peaking in the
    1200 to 1500 J/kg range, with 0-6 km shear around 40 knots. In
    addition, 700 to 500 mb lapse rates are forecast to be in the 7.5 to
    8 C/km range. This environment will support severe thunderstorms in
    the afternoon and evening, with a potential for large hail and
    severe wind gusts, and perhaps a tornado threat. The severe threat
    will be maximized in areas with supercell development. The severe
    threat will likely persist into the late evening as a low-level jet strengthens.

    ...Northern Ozarks/Mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys...
    West-southwesterly mid-level flow will be located from the mid
    Mississippi Valley eastward into the Ohio Valley on Wednesday. At
    the surface, a low will move eastward from northern Missouri into
    north-central Illinois during the day. A warm front will advance
    northward across Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. To the south of the
    warm front, surface dewpoints in the 50s F will contribute to the
    development of weak instability. Along the instability axis, a 30 to
    40 knot low-level jet is forecast to consolidate over the Ohio
    Valley in the afternoon and evening. Lift associated with the
    low-level jet will support the formation of isolated to scattered thunderstorms. Effective shear near 40 knots and 700-500 mb lapse
    rates around 7.5 C/km should be favorable for a marginal severe
    threat. Hail and isolated severe wind gusts will be possible.

    ..Broyles.. 03/02/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 2 19:26:34 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 021926
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 021925

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0125 PM CST Mon Mar 02 2026

    Valid 041200Z - 051200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTH TX TO
    WESTERN AR...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms may occur from
    mid-afternoon to evening Wednesday, centered on parts of north Texas
    to western Arkansas. Large hail should be the primary hazard.

    ...Synopsis...
    A lower-amplitude shortwave impulse will gradually move from the
    central Great Plains to the Mid/Lower MO Valley, while a much more
    amplified trough digs across the West. Surface cyclone reflection
    will be nebulous in association with the lead wave, along a front
    that should be quasi-stationary on Wednesday afternoon/evening. The
    trailing portion of this front will advance north as a warm front in
    west TX, downstream of the amplified wave in the West.

    ...Central TX to western AR...
    Initially steep mid-level lapse rates in conjunction with further boundary-layer moistening in the warm sector ahead of the front
    should yield a broad plume of moderate MLCAPE from 1000-2000 J/kg by mid-afternoon across much of central/eastern TX into eastern OK.
    Weak mid-level height falls trailing from the NE/KS shortwave trough
    and adequate convergence along the quasi-stationary should support
    increasing convective development towards late afternoon. Deep-layer
    shear with southern extent in TX will be weak owing to the
    compactness of the jetlet attendant to the aforementioned trough.
    Effective bulk shear should commonly hold around 15-25 kts. Shear
    values will increase north of the Red River, but remain modest
    relative to early spring climo. Transient supercell structures that
    evolve into mainly multicell clusters are the anticipated modes. At
    least isolated severe hail is anticipated, primarily in the
    mid-afternoon to early evening, before organized cellular structures
    diminish. The paucity of cyclogenesis/stronger deep-layer shear and
    modest large-scale ascent may help marginalize the overall severe
    threat.

    ...Ozarks to the Lower OH Valley...
    Multiple rounds of convective potential are expected through the
    period. Elevated storms should be ongoing on Wednesday morning and
    will help define the northern extent of any surface-based
    destabilization into the Mid-MS/Lower OH Valleys. The degree of
    warm-sector insolation is questionable with potential for repeated
    convective regeneration ahead of the KS/NE shortwave trough.
    Conditionally, moderately favorable deep-layer shear could support a
    few supercells and/or linear clusters near the quasi-stationary
    front. As such, a swath of low severe probabilities remains
    warranted, mainly from mid-afternoon into the evening Wednesday.

    ..Grams.. 03/02/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 3 08:32:06 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 030832
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 030830

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0230 AM CST Tue Mar 03 2026

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected Thursday afternoon and
    evening across parts of the southern and central Plains. Large hail,
    isolated severe gusts and a tornado or two will be possible.
    Marginally severe storms may also develop from Thursday evening into
    the overnight across the central Plains and mid Missouri Valley.

    ...Great Plains/Mid Missouri Valley...
    At mid-levels, flow will become southwesterly across the Great
    Plains on Thursday, as a strong low pressure system moves though the Intermountain West. At the surface, a low will deepen across eastern
    Colorado, as south-southeasterly flow strengthens across the
    southern and central Plains. Low-level moisture will advect
    northward across Oklahoma, northwest Texas and the Texas Panhandle
    during the afternoon. A dryline is forecast to develop across west
    Texas as a thermal/instability axis sets up over west-central Texas.
    Scattered storms are expected to initiate near the dryline on the
    Caprock in the late afternoon, moving eastward into the southern
    Plains during the early evening. As moisture advection continues,
    additional storms should develop further north into far southern
    Kansas during the evening.

    Late afternoon forecast soundings in west Texas from Big Spring to
    Childress have 0-6 km shear near 40 knots, MLCAPE around 1500 J/kg,
    and 700-500 mb lapse rates near 7.5 C/km. This will be favorable for
    supercells with large hail and isolated severe wind gusts. A tornado
    threat, along with hailstones greater than 2 inches in diameter will
    be possible with the most intense cells. The storms are expected to
    move eastward into western Oklahoma and the Lower Rolling Plains of
    northwest Texas during the evening, with additional cells developing
    across southern Kansas. The strengthening low-level jet will help
    sustain a threat for hail and severe gusts.

    Further north across the central Plains and mid Missouri Valley,
    moisture and instability will gradually increase during the evening
    as a low-level jet strengthens. Scattered elevated storms are
    expected to develop near the low-level jet around midnight and
    should increase in coverage during the overnight period. MUCAPE in
    the 500 to 1000 J/kg range, along with 700-500 mb lapse rates in the
    7 to 8 C/km range should be favorable for hail. The severe threat is
    expected to persist through late in the period.

    ..Broyles.. 03/03/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Tue Mar 3 19:28:10 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 031928
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 031927

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0127 PM CST Tue Mar 03 2026

    Valid 051200Z - 061200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THURSDAY AFTERNOON
    INTO THURSDAY NIGHT FROM WEST TEXAS INTO SOUTHWEST/CENTRAL KANSAS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected Thursday afternoon and
    into Thursday night from west Texas into Kansas. Large hail appears
    to be the main threat, though a couple of tornadoes and isolated
    severe gusts will also be possible.

    ...Southern/central Plains Thursday afternoon/night...
    Amplification of a midlevel trough is expected near the Four Corners
    Thursday into Thursday night, as a downstream lee cyclone deepens
    across eastern CO. The deepening cyclone will draw moisture
    northward from TX across the southern/central Plains through early
    Friday in the developing warm sector. The lee trough/dryline will
    be located near or just west of the KS/CO and TX/NM borders by late
    afternoon as the cyclone deepens in place. Surface heating in cloud
    breaks could allow sufficient vertical mixing to weaken convective
    inhibition and allow isolated thunderstorm development along and
    just east of the dryline by late afternoon across the TX
    Panhandle/South Plains into southwest KS. The storm environment
    will conditionally favor supercells capable of producing large hail
    near or just in excess of 2 inches in diameter. The tornado threat
    will be a little greater by early evening as low-level shear
    increases and near 60 F dewpoints surge northward from OK into KS,
    though the tornado threat will depend on a supercell or two
    persisting into late evening.

    Otherwise, elevated convection will spread northeastward Thursday
    night as the low-level jet and associated warm/moist advection
    increase. Steep midlevel lapse rates will support the potential for
    large hail with the overnight convection as far north as NE/IA.

    ..Thompson.. 03/03/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 4 08:29:44 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 040829
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 040828

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0228 AM CST Wed Mar 04 2026

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE LOWER TO MID MISSOURI
    VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms with large hail, severe wind gusts and tornadoes are
    expected on Friday and Friday night across parts of the southern and
    central Plains, northward into the lower to mid Missouri Valley. A
    severe threat is also expected over parts of Ozarks, mid Mississippi
    Valley, and mid to upper Mississippi Valley from the evening into
    the overnight.

    ...Southern and Central Plains/Lower and Mid Missouri Valley...
    A strong upper-level trough will move northeastward across the
    central High Plains on Friday, as an associated mid-level jet
    translates northeastward across the central Plains. At the surface,
    a cold front will advance southeastward across the central Plains
    and southern High Plains during the afternoon. Ahead of the front,
    surface dewpoints will be in the lower to mid 60s F. As surface
    temperatures warm, moderate instability will develop over much of
    the moist sector by midday. Increasing low-level convergence along
    the front, and across parts of the moist sector will result in
    convective initiation during the mid to late afternoon. Scattered
    thunderstorms are forecast to develop and move east-northeastward
    toward the instability axis, where strong low-level flow be
    maximized. This will result in a substantial severe threat from late
    afternoon into the evening from the southern and central Plains north-northeastward into the lower to mid Missouri Valley.

    A well-defined 65 to 85 knot mid-level jet is forecast to move
    across the southern and central High Plains during the afternoon.
    This feature will create moderate to strong deep-layer shear over
    much of the moist sector, which will be favorable for severe storms.
    Recent runs from the ECMWF have the position of the mid-level jet
    further south during the late afternoon, which will be more
    favorably timed for a severe weather event in the southern and
    central Plains. Several NAM forecast soundings across southern and
    central Oklahoma northeastward into southeast Kansas by early
    evening have 0-6 km shear around 50 knots with 0-3 km storm relative
    helicity in the 300 to 400 m2/s2 range. Low-level shear will be
    strong due to a focused 850 mb jet forecast to develop over eastern
    Oklahoma. This will support a threat for supercells with strong
    tornadoes. In addition to the instability and shear, steep low to
    mid-level lapse rates will also be in place supporting a large hail
    and wind-damage threat. Hailstones greater than 2 inches in diameter
    will be possible with the more intense supercells. The potential for
    supercells with tornadoes and large to very large hail will extend
    as far north as the Kansas City Metro, where a secondary low-level
    jet is forecast to develop early Friday evening. The severe threat
    should persist from the evening into the overnight period, as
    multiple supercell clusters gradually congeal into a severe line
    segment.

    ...Ozarks/Mid to Upper Mississippi Valley...
    Moisture advection will continue throughout the day on Friday into
    the evening across the mid to Upper Mississippi Valley. During the
    mid to late evening, thunderstorms will begin to spread eastward
    into the region. Surface dewpoints in the 60s F, MLCAPE in the 500
    to 1000 J/kg range, and moderate to strong deep-layer shear will be
    favorable for a severe threat. Some model forecasts suggest that an
    intense convective line will move eastward into the Ozarks and mid
    to upper Mississippi Valley during the mid to late evening. Under
    this scenario, supercells embedded in the line would be capable of
    large hail. Severe wind gusts and an isolated tornado threat will
    also be possible with the faster moving sections of the line,
    especially with bowing segments.

    ..Broyles.. 03/04/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 4 08:46:15 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 040846
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 040845

    Day 3 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0245 AM CST Wed Mar 04 2026

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS INTO THE LOWER TO MID MISSOURI
    VALLEY...

    CORRECTED FOR TEXT IN SUMMARY

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms with large hail, severe wind gusts and tornadoes are
    expected on Friday and Friday night across parts of the southern and
    central Plains, northward into the lower to mid Missouri Valley. A
    severe threat is also expected over parts of Ozarks, and in the mid
    to upper Mississippi Valley from the evening into the overnight.

    ...Southern and Central Plains/Lower and Mid Missouri Valley...
    A strong upper-level trough will move northeastward across the
    central High Plains on Friday, as an associated mid-level jet
    translates northeastward across the central Plains. At the surface,
    a cold front will advance southeastward across the central Plains
    and southern High Plains during the afternoon. Ahead of the front,
    surface dewpoints will be in the lower to mid 60s F. As surface
    temperatures warm, moderate instability will develop over much of
    the moist sector by midday. Increasing low-level convergence along
    the front, and across parts of the moist sector will result in
    convective initiation during the mid to late afternoon. Scattered
    thunderstorms are forecast to develop and move east-northeastward
    toward the instability axis, where strong low-level flow be
    maximized. This will result in a substantial severe threat from late
    afternoon into the evening from the southern and central Plains north-northeastward into the lower to mid Missouri Valley.

    A well-defined 65 to 85 knot mid-level jet is forecast to move
    across the southern and central High Plains during the afternoon.
    This feature will create moderate to strong deep-layer shear over
    much of the moist sector, which will be favorable for severe storms.
    Recent runs from the ECMWF have the position of the mid-level jet
    further south during the late afternoon, which will be more
    favorably timed for a severe weather event in the southern and
    central Plains. Several NAM forecast soundings across southern and
    central Oklahoma northeastward into southeast Kansas by early
    evening have 0-6 km shear around 50 knots with 0-3 km storm relative
    helicity in the 300 to 400 m2/s2 range. Low-level shear will be
    strong due to a focused 850 mb jet forecast to develop over eastern
    Oklahoma. This will support a threat for supercells with strong
    tornadoes. In addition to the instability and shear, steep low to
    mid-level lapse rates will also be in place supporting a large hail
    and wind-damage threat. Hailstones greater than 2 inches in diameter
    will be possible with the more intense supercells. The potential for
    supercells with tornadoes and large to very large hail will extend
    as far north as the Kansas City Metro, where a secondary low-level
    jet is forecast to develop early Friday evening. The severe threat
    should persist from the evening into the overnight period, as
    multiple supercell clusters gradually congeal into a severe line
    segment.

    ...Ozarks/Mid to Upper Mississippi Valley...
    Moisture advection will continue throughout the day on Friday into
    the evening across the mid to Upper Mississippi Valley. During the
    mid to late evening, thunderstorms will begin to spread eastward
    into the region. Surface dewpoints in the 60s F, MLCAPE in the 500
    to 1000 J/kg range, and moderate to strong deep-layer shear will be
    favorable for a severe threat. Some model forecasts suggest that an
    intense convective line will move eastward into the Ozarks and mid
    to upper Mississippi Valley during the mid to late evening. Under
    this scenario, supercells embedded in the line would be capable of
    large hail. Severe wind gusts and an isolated tornado threat will
    also be possible with the faster moving sections of the line,
    especially with bowing segments.

    ..Broyles.. 03/04/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Mar 4 19:27:18 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 041927
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 041926

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0126 PM CST Wed Mar 04 2026

    Valid 061200Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EASTERN
    KS/OK TO WESTERN MO...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected from late afternoon
    Friday through Friday night from portions of the central/southern
    Great Plains to the Midwest. The most probable corridor for
    tornadoes, damaging winds, and large hail is across eastern portions
    of Kansas and Oklahoma to western Missouri.

    ...Synopsis...
    Broad upper trough over the West should split into two distinct
    impulses by Friday night. Leading shortwave trough should eject from
    the Four Corners across the central Great Plains to the Upper
    Mississippi Valley, while a backside cutoff low evolves over the
    Lower CO Valley. Lead cyclone should track from western KS vicinity
    across IA to the central Great Lakes. The dryline should mix towards
    central OK/TX through late afternoon. A surface cold front will
    accelerate southeastward across the central/southern Great Plains on
    the backside of the lead cyclone.

    ...Central/southern Great Plains into the Midwest...
    Most appreciable change this outlook has been to flatten the
    previously tight gradient to severe probabilities over the Great
    Plains. The splitting of the broad western trough and positive-tilt
    of the leading shortwave impulse suggests that surface features on
    Friday afternoon should lag westward compared to the typically
    overmixed GFS. Initial storm development should occur across central
    KS near the triple-point mesolow by mid to late afternoon. Expanding
    convective coverage is anticipated to the northeast into IA/MO and
    south into at least northern OK. Available D3 CAM guidance is much
    less robust than parameterized models with the degree of convective
    development through early evening towards the Red River and
    southward into central TX. With near-neutral mid-level height falls,
    it is plausible that convection south of the latitudinally compact
    mid-level jetlet will remain isolated. This lowers confidence in the
    southern extent of highlighted level 3-ENH risk across most of OK.

    Across eastern KS, northern OK, and western Missouri, initial
    supercells will probably grow upscale into a broader QLCS during the
    evening, with semi-discrete activity favored along the southern
    flank. Strengthening 850-700 mb southwesterlies suggest damaging
    wind and QLCS tornado potential could persist across the Mid-MS
    Valley towards the Lake MI vicinity overnight in a weak MLCAPE/high
    shear environment. Available CAM guidance does indicate a general
    alignment of QLCS with the deep-layer shear vector, suggesting of a
    sporadic severe threat mainly where embedded bowing segments/surges
    can develop.

    Farther south, storm development will become increasingly probable
    as the accelerating cold front overtakes and merges with the front
    on Friday night. Outside of frontal convergence and low-level warm
    advection atop the undercutting front in western TX, large-scale
    ascent should remain nebulous. Large hail may accompany initial
    updrafts, with severe wind/tornado potential nocturnally limited.

    ..Grams.. 03/04/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 5 08:29:20 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 050829
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 050828

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0228 AM CST Thu Mar 05 2026

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE TEXAS COASTAL PLAIN AND IN THE UPPER OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe storms will be possible on Saturday from the Texas Coastal
    Plain into western Louisiana, and in the Ohio Valley/Lower Great
    Lakes. Wind damage will be the primary threat, except in parts of
    Texas where isolated large hail could also occur. A marginal severe
    threat will also be possible across the Southeast and Tennessee
    Valley.

    ...Texas Coastal Plain/Western Louisiana...
    Mid-level west-southwesterly flow will be in place from the
    south-central U.S. to the Eastern Seaboard on Saturday. At the
    surface, a cold front will move southeastward into the Texas Coastal
    Plains and Ark-La-Tex by afternoon. Surface dewpoints ahead of the
    front will be in the 60s F, contributing to moderate instability by
    midday. Thunderstorms are expected to form along the front early in
    the day and steadily increase in coverage. A large complex of storms
    is forecast to move southeastward across the Texas Coastal Plain and
    the Sabine River Valley during the afternoon and evening. Model
    forecasts suggest that 0-6 km shear will generally range from 30 to
    35 knots, and that lapse rates will be steep in the low-levels. This
    should be favorable for a wind-damage threat with intense line
    segments that form ahead of the front. A few supercells with large
    hail and wind damage may also develop further southwest into the
    southern Texas Hill Country, where forecast soundings have stronger
    deep-layer shear. During the evening, the severe threat should move
    offshore from the middle and upper Texas into the Gulf.

    ...Ohio and Tennessee Valleys/Southern and Central Appalachians...
    At mid-levels on Saturday, a shortwave trough will move eastward
    across the north-central U.S., as an associated jet streak
    translates through the Great Lakes. At the surface, a front will
    advance eastward across the mid Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Ahead
    of the front, surface dewpoints will range from the 60s F in the
    Ohio and Tennessee Valleys, to the 50s F in the southern and central Appalachians. Weak instability is forecast to develop in most areas
    ahead of the front by afternoon. Forecast soundings in the upper
    Ohio Valley show very strong wind fields, with 30 to 40 knots of
    southwesterly flow just above the surface. This will contribute to a wind-damage threat with short line segments that form ahead of the
    front in the afternoon. The greatest wind-damage threat will likely
    be in the late afternoon as a low-level jet consolidates and
    strengthens across the upper Ohio Valley.

    ..Broyles.. 03/05/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Mar 5 19:29:24 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 051929
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 051928

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0128 PM CST Thu Mar 05 2026

    Valid 071200Z - 081200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM TX TO LOWER
    MS VALLEY AND THE UPPER OH VALLEY TO LOWER GREAT LAKES...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible from
    Saturday morning into the evening across a broad swath of the
    southern Great Plains to the Lower Great Lakes. Isolated very large
    hail may occur in parts of Texas.

    ...Synopsis...
    An upper trough consisting of multiple embedded shortwave impulses
    will move east from the Upper Midwest to the Great Lakes. A closed
    low over the Lower CO Valley will further retrograde to west of Baja
    CA. A surface cyclone over eastern Upper MI at 12Z Saturday will
    deepen as it rapidly progresses into QC. A full-latitude cold front
    will arc southwestward, crossing the eastern Great Lakes and Midwest
    on Saturday. The trailing portion will slow its southern movement
    over TX and likely be modulated by convective outflows.

    ...TX to the Lower MS Valley...
    Primary changes are to add a CIG1 area for very large hail potential
    in TX, and shift/expand the cat 2-SLGT risk north-northeast per
    latest guidance.

    While TX will largely remain within a flat to low-amplitude
    mid-level ridge between the aforementioned troughs/lows well to its
    north and west, seasonably rich low-level moisture atop an
    undercutting cold front should support regenerative convection
    through much of the period. With the west-southwesterly mid-level
    flow regime, steep mid-level lapse rates will be maintained over the pre-convective warm sector. Low-level flow will become increasingly
    weak and diffluent, yielding a favorable deep-layer wind profile for
    hail growth. Primary uncertainty is the degree of surface-based
    development towards late afternoon/early evening along the composite front/outflow. Current indications are that CIG2-type giant hail
    potential might evolve with more discrete/isolated convection in the south-central TX vicinity. For now, will incrementally add a CIG1
    and defer to later outlooks for a possible categorical upgrade.

    Farther east-northeast across the Lower MS Valley, clusters may be consolidating into line segments by mid-late morning Saturday. These
    may yield an increase in mainly damaging wind and brief tornado
    potential as the warm/moist sector destabilizes downstream. An
    extensive swath of widespread convection is anticipated during the
    afternoon. But this should become increasingly aligned with the
    deep-layer shear vector. In conjunction with decreasing low-level
    hodograph curvature, setup may only favor sporadic damaging winds
    before storm intensities wane after sunset.

    ...OH Valley to the Lower Great Lakes...
    No adjustment has been made to the level 2-SLGT risk area. At least
    scattered convection should be ongoing upstream over parts of the
    Midwest and Mid-South along/ahead of the aforementioned cold front.
    This activity may not entirely decay, with renewed storm development
    possible along the large-scale outflow that will probably remain
    displaced appreciably east of the front. Where adequate insolation
    can occur amid steep mid-level lapse rates, an uptick in storm
    intensity should occur midday into the afternoon. Overall amplitudes
    still seem to favor non-significant severe, but a scattering of
    damaging winds, a couple tornadoes, and isolated marginally severe
    hail all appear plausible. These threats should wane after sunset
    and with eastern extent towards the Appalachians.

    ..Grams.. 03/05/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 6 08:01:29 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 060801
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 060800

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0200 AM CST Fri Mar 06 2026

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms potential is low on Sunday.

    ...Synopsis...

    A lower-amplitude upper-level pattern defined by westerly flow aloft
    east of the Rockies will overspread the central and eastern U.S. on
    Sunday. Meanwhile, an upper low will persist offshore from Baja CA.
    At the surface, a cold front will move offshore the Northeast coast
    by late afternoon. The southern extension of this boundary will
    stall from the Mid-Atlantic into the TN Valley. Meanwhile, the
    western portion of the boundary across eastern and southern TX will
    lift northward late in the period. Gulf moisture will remain in
    place across the southeast U.S. into TX, but limited large-scale
    ascent and lack of height falls within the quasi-zonal regime will
    limit severe potential. Nevertheless, isolated thunderstorms may be
    ongoing across parts of the Lower MS Valley along remnant outflow
    from the Day 2/Sat period. The warm advection regime across TX also
    may support isolated thunderstorms through the period. Overall,
    severe thunderstorm potential appears low.

    ..Leitman.. 03/06/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Mar 6 19:15:33 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 061915
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 061914

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0114 PM CST Fri Mar 06 2026

    Valid 081200Z - 091200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS IN THE CAROLINAS
    TO SOUTHEAST VA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated, marginally severe thunderstorms are possible on Sunday
    afternoon to early evening across parts of the Carolinas to
    southeast Virginia.

    ...Synopsis...
    A lead shortwave impulse will quickly progress east from the Saint
    Lawrence Valley, as a backside shortwave trough rapidly moves from
    the Upper Great Lakes across New England by Sunday night. Surface
    front trailing southwest from the lead impulse will push off the
    coastal Mid-Atlantic by Sunday afternoon, with frontolysis occurring
    over the Southeast during the evening/night.

    ...Carolinas and southeast VA...
    The northern extent of the surface-based warm sector should overlap
    the southern extent of strong mid-level westerlies atop the trailing
    cold front. Guidance consensus suggests weak buoyancy should develop
    by midday/early afternoon across the Southeast Atlantic Coastal
    Plain and adjacent Piedmont. Both the 12Z NAM and ECMWF depict
    modestly steep mid-level lapse rates may be present near the
    mid-level jetlet across VA. Bulk of guidance indicates isolated to
    scattered storm development off the Piedmont to coastal plain
    through the afternoon into early evening, before convergence along
    the front wanes. While low-level shear should be weak, favorable mid
    to upper-level speed shear could support a few cells with transient
    mid-level rotation. Isolated severe storms with marginal hail/wind
    magnitudes seem plausible. This scenario is supported by at least 5
    percent total severe probs in the 12Z SPC-GEFS, along with the 00Z
    NSSL-GEFS and both NCAR-ECENS ML products.

    ..Grams.. 03/06/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 7 07:20:39 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 070720
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 070719

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0119 AM CST Sat Mar 07 2026

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM NORTHEAST
    TEXAS INTO MISSISSIPPI...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated strong to severe thunderstorms are possible on Monday from
    northeast Texas into Mississippi.

    ...ArkLaTex to Mississippi...

    An upper low over northwest Mexico will begin to migrate east toward
    the southern Rockies/northern Mexico on Monday. Ahead of this
    feature, a subtle upper shortwave impulse will move from the
    southern Plains to the Southeast. This will allow enhanced
    west/southwesterly flow to overspread a moistening boundary layer
    across the Lower MS Valley into the Mid-South and TN Valley.
    Large-scale ascent will remain subtle. However, forecast guidance
    suggests sufficiently steep lapse rates will be present to support
    at least modest destabilization. Favorable deep shear also should
    support organized updrafts if enough destabilization occurs within
    the warm advection regime. Given modest forcing mechanisms, storm
    coverage is uncertain. However, the overall environment should be at
    least conditionally favorable for a few strong to severe storms
    through Monday afternoon/evening across portions of the ArkLaTex
    into MS.

    ..Leitman.. 03/07/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sat Mar 7 19:32:43 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 071932
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 071931

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0131 PM CST Sat Mar 07 2026

    Valid 091200Z - 101200Z

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE
    ARKLATEX INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated severe thunderstorms are possible on Monday from the
    Arklatex into the lower Mississippi Valley.

    ...Arklatex into the lower Mississippi Valley...
    To the south of the primary belt of midlevel westerlies extending
    across the northern CONUS, a low-amplitude impulse and accompanying
    speed max will overspread the lower MS Valley during the afternoon.
    Here, steep midlevel lapse rates will overspread deep/rich
    boundary-layer moisture (middle/upper 60s dewpoints). This should
    yield weak to moderate surface-based buoyancy by the afternoon.
    Given the low-amplitude nature of the midlevel wave and lack of any
    substantial low-level fronts, thunderstorm coverage remains
    uncertain. However, around 50 kt of deep-layer shear and sufficient surface-based buoyancy will favor organized storms to include the
    potential for supercells. The primary concern with any stronger
    storms that can develop will be large hail and damaging gusts,
    though some tornado risk is also possible. A corridor of greater
    severe potential is possible (depending on the degree of diurnal
    heating and mesoscale ascent), though confidence for an upgrade is
    too low at this time.

    ..Weinman.. 03/07/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 8 08:32:47 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 080832
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 080831

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0331 AM CDT Sun Mar 08 2026

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    NORTHEAST MISSOURI...FAR SOUTHEAST IA AND PARTS OF NORTHERN/CENTRAL
    ILLINOIS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered to widespread severe thunderstorms are possible on Monday
    from the southern Plains into the Middle Mississippi Valley
    vicinity. All severe hazards are possible.

    ...Southern Plains to Mid-MS Valley Vicinity...

    A complex scenario is expected to unfold on Monday and Monday night
    across a broad warm sector from the southern Plains into the Mid-MS
    Valley and Lake Michigan vicinity. An initially split-flow upper
    level pattern will see an upper low and attendant trough over
    northwest Mexico lift northeast across the southern Rockies into the
    adjacent High Plains. As this occurs, a northern stream upper trough
    will deepen over the northern/central Plains, with the two systems
    merging by the end of the period. This will result in substantial
    mid/upper southwesterly flow streaming across the area atop strong
    low-level warm advection. A broad warm sector with surface dewpoints
    in the 60s F will encompass much of OK/TX/eastern KS eastward into
    the Mid/Lower MS Valley and Lower OH/TN Valleys. Two areas of
    deepening surface low pressure are forecast -- one across the OK/TX
    Panhandle vicinity, the other across northwest MO into IA. A dryline
    will extend southward from the Plains low, and a warm front will
    extend west to east from southern IA into northern IL/IN during the
    afternoon. After 00z, a cold front will develop southeast, becoming
    positioned from southern Lake Michigan southwest to central OK.
    There is some uncertainty in the position of these surface features,
    but this appears to be the best estimate at this time based on
    various guidance.

    Some uncertainty also exists with regards to capping, particularly
    across OK into parts of MO. Nevertheless, strong vertical shear atop
    a very moist warm and moderately unstable airmass should support
    scattered to possibly widespread severe thunderstorms. Supercell
    wind profiles will support large to very large hail where discrete
    convection occurs. Linear forcing along surface boundaries also may
    favor linear segments, especially after dark. Tornado potential may
    be maximized near the surface warm front/triple point across parts
    of MO/IL and far southeast IA. Outlook areas may change some in the
    coming days as mesoscale details become better resolved.

    ..Leitman.. 03/08/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 8 10:04:48 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 081004
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 081003

    Day 3 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0503 AM CDT Sun Mar 08 2026

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    NORTHEAST MISSOURI...FAR SOUTHEAST IOWA...AND PARTS OF
    NORTHERN/CENTRAL ILLINOIS...

    CORRECTED FOR INCORRECT DAY OF THE WEEK REFERENCES

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered to widespread severe thunderstorms are possible on Tuesday
    from the southern Plains into the Middle Mississippi Valley
    vicinity. All severe hazards are possible.

    ...Southern Plains to Mid-MS Valley Vicinity...

    A complex scenario is expected to unfold on Tuesday and Tuesday
    night across a broad warm sector from the southern Plains into the
    Mid-MS Valley and Lake Michigan vicinity. An initially split-flow
    upper level pattern will see an upper low and attendant trough over
    northwest Mexico lift northeast across the southern Rockies into the
    adjacent High Plains. As this occurs, a northern stream upper trough
    will deepen over the northern/central Plains, with the two systems
    merging by the end of the period. This will result in substantial
    mid/upper southwesterly flow streaming across the area atop strong
    low-level warm advection. A broad warm sector with surface dewpoints
    in the 60s F will encompass much of OK/TX/eastern KS eastward into
    the Mid/Lower MS Valley and Lower OH/TN Valleys. Two areas of
    deepening surface low pressure are forecast -- one across the OK/TX
    Panhandle vicinity, the other across northwest MO into IA. A dryline
    will extend southward from the Plains low, and a warm front will
    extend west to east from southern IA into northern IL/IN during the
    afternoon. After 00z, a cold front will develop southeast, becoming
    positioned from southern Lake Michigan southwest to central OK.
    There is some uncertainty in the position of these surface features,
    but this appears to be the best estimate at this time based on
    various guidance.

    Some uncertainty also exists with regards to capping, particularly
    across OK into parts of MO. Nevertheless, strong vertical shear atop
    a very moist warm and moderately unstable airmass should support
    scattered to possibly widespread severe thunderstorms. Supercell
    wind profiles will support large to very large hail where discrete
    convection occurs. Linear forcing along surface boundaries also may
    favor linear segments, especially after dark. Tornado potential may
    be maximized near the surface warm front/triple point across parts
    of MO/IL and far southeast IA. Outlook areas may change some in the
    coming days as mesoscale details become better resolved.

    ..Leitman.. 03/08/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Mar 8 19:33:51 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 081933
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 081933

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0233 PM CDT Sun Mar 08 2026

    Valid 101200Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS
    NORTHEAST MISSOURI...FAR SOUTHEAST IOWA...AND PARTS OF
    NORTHERN/CENTRAL ILLINOIS...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are forecast on Tuesday from the
    southern Plains into the southern Great Lakes vicinity. All severe
    hazards are possible.

    ...Synopsis...
    A robust low-latitude midlevel trough will move eastward across
    northern MX and the Southwest to the southern Plains through the
    period. At the same time, a broad northern-stream midlevel trough
    will gradually amplify as it advances eastward across the northern
    Plains into the upper MS Valley. In the low-levels, a
    quasi-stationary warm front will extend eastward into the southern
    Great Lakes vicinity from a weak surface low over the middle MS
    Valley. Farther south, a separate surface low will evolve over the
    central High Plains, while a dryline extends southward before being
    overtaken by a cold front. Along and east of these features, a
    broad/expansive warm sector characterized by middle/upper 60s
    dewpoints will encompass the southern/central Plains into the middle
    MS Valley and southern Great Lakes region. While this large-scale
    pattern should favor at least scattered severe thunderstorms capable
    of all hazards across a broad area, the split-flow nature of the
    pattern limits confidence in the details.

    ...Middle MS Valley and southern Great Lakes...
    Along and south of the quasi-stationary warm front, a low-level jet
    will gradually strengthen into the evening/overnight hours,
    resulting in large clockwise-curved hodographs. Given ample
    moisture/buoyancy, supercell clusters will be the primary concern,
    with an accompanying risk of damaging winds, a few tornadoes (some
    possibly strong) and severe hail. Given a substantial westerly
    component to the deep-layer flow/shear, any established storms that
    evolve over the middle MS Valley region may continue to pose a
    tornado risk into the southern Great Lakes region during the
    overnight hours, though confidence in this scenario is currently
    low.

    ...Southern Plains...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected along/east of the dryline in the
    southern Plains, where ample deep-layer shear and surface-based
    buoyancy will support a mix of organized clusters and supercells
    capable of all hazards. Eventually, linear forcing along the front
    should promote upscale growth, when the severe-wind and tornado risk
    may increase into central TX. A separate corridor of severe
    potential is possible across north-central into southern OK, where
    the potential for semi-discrete supercells is evident.

    ..Weinman.. 03/08/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 9 07:21:56 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 090721
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 090720

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0220 AM CDT Mon Mar 09 2026

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE ARKLATEX
    AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY NORTHEAST THROUGH THE OHIO VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible on Wednesday
    from the ArkLaTex and Lower Mississippi Valley northeastward through
    the Ohio Valley vicinity.

    ...East Texas northeast to the Ohio Valley vicinity...

    A split-flow regime will continue into Wednesday, with upper
    troughing over the central U.S. remaining bifurcated through much of
    the period. In the southern branch, a closed low/upper shortwave
    trough will migrate from TX to the Lower MS Valley. Meanwhile, the
    northern stream upper trough over the northern Plains/Upper Midwest
    will develop east across the Upper Great Lakes/Midwest. Ahead of
    these features, strong southwesterly deep-layer flow will extend
    from east TX into the Mid-Atlantic/New England. At the surface, a
    cold front will extend southwest from a surface low over southern
    Lower MI into western OK. This front will advance southeast through
    the period, becoming oriented from the Mid-Atlantic coast to the
    central Gulf coast by Thursday morning.

    Strong warm advection ahead of the front will transport Gulf
    moisture as far north as the Mid-Atlantic and southern New England.
    Ongoing convection is expected ahead of the front across portions of
    the ArkLaTex into the Midwest. This, along with the warm advection
    regime resulting in widespread cloudiness, lends to uncertainty in
    how the downstream airmass will destabilize, especially with
    northeast extent into parts of the Ohio Valley vicinity. Somewhat
    stronger destabilization is likely across the Lower MS Valley where
    richer Gulf moisture will reside. Strong vertical wind profiles will
    support damaging wind potential with even modest instability. Linear
    convection is the most likely storm mode given deep-layer flow
    parallel to the surface boundary and strong large-scale ascent
    overspreading the boundary. If discrete cells can form, some tornado
    potential will exist closer to a deepening surface cyclone in the
    vicinity of the upper Ohio Valley, and perhaps near a secondary
    surface low over the lower MS Valley, though this scenario remains
    highly uncertain.

    ..Leitman.. 03/09/2026

    $$

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Mar 9 19:26:27 2026
    ACUS03 KWNS 091926
    SWODY3
    SPC AC 091925

    Day 3 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0225 PM CDT Mon Mar 09 2026

    Valid 111200Z - 121200Z

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM EAST TEXAS
    AND THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER VALLEY INTO THE OHIO RIVER VALLEY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are expected on Wednesday
    from the ArkLaTex and Lower Mississippi Valley northeastward through
    the Ohio Valley vicinity.

    ...Synopsis...
    Strong to severe thunderstorms are probable across an expansive warm
    sector stretching from the Gulf Coast northward into the upper Ohio
    Valley region. The amplification of an upper wave over the northern
    CONUS will support steady intensification of a surface cyclone as it
    migrates from the Great Lakes region into southeast Quebec by 12 UTC
    Thursday. An attendant cold front will push across the MS Valley
    into the upper OH Valley and Southeast states during the forecast
    period, and will act as the primary foci for thunderstorm
    development.

    ...East Texas into the Lower MS Valley...
    Thunderstorm clusters and/or convective bands will likely be
    ongoing, albeit weakening, across the eastern TX/OK at the start of
    the forecast period. A combination of daytime heating, ascent ahead
    of a southern-stream upper trough, and forcing along the approaching
    cold front should promote an uptick in convective intensity and
    coverage by late morning/early afternoon across LA and MS.
    Storm-motion vectors largely along the front will maintain a linear
    storm mode and support primarily a severe wind threat. The severe
    threat may be maximized during the late morning/early afternoon
    hours as buoyancy increases but before low to mid-level flow
    decreases as the synoptic low accelerates away to the northeast.

    ...OH Valley...
    Low-level moisture and a remnant EML will continue to spread
    north/northeast in tandem with the translation of the surface low.
    This should support adequate buoyancy within a narrow, but
    migratory, warm sector for surface-based convection. Strong flow in
    proximity to the surface low/upper jet will promote organized
    convection along the front, most likely organized clusters and lines
    capable of severe gusts and perhaps embedded circulations. Recent extended-range RRFS solutions hint at the development of pre-frontal
    supercells within a diffuse plume of low-level theta-e advection
    across the upper OH Valley. Forecast soundings from this region
    suggest that tornadic supercells are possible. Other guidance also
    depicts this plume of theta-e advection, which lends some credence
    to this scenario. However, the RRFS is typically overly aggressive
    with convective intensity, and recent MPAS solutions are less
    bullish on deep convection ahead of the front where mostly cloudy
    skies should limit diurnal insolation to some degree. This
    uncertainty precludes the introduction of higher risk probabilities,
    but trends will be monitored for a more robust severe threat within
    this regime.

    ..Moore.. 03/09/2026

    $$

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