• DAY48: D4 SEVERE OUTBREAK

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Sun Mar 30 08:10:00 2025
    ACUS48 KWNS 300901
    SWOD48
    SPC AC 300859

    Day 4-8 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0359 AM CDT Sun Mar 30 2025

    Valid 021200Z - 071200Z

    ...SEVERE WEATHER OUTBREAK POSSIBLE ON D4/WED...

    ...DISCUSSION...
    Medium-range models appear to be in good agreement with overall
    evolution of the synoptic-scale pattern into the Day 7 (Saturday
    April 5) time period, when divergence in solutions increases.

    Earlier in the period however, model consistency lends fairly high
    confidence that a widespread/potentially substantial outbreak of
    severe weather will evolve Wednesday/Day 4, from Lower Michigan and
    the Ohio Valley, southwestward across the Middle and Lower
    Mississippi Valleys, and into eastern portions of Texas and
    Oklahoma. Convection will likely be ongoing or developing early in
    the day, over western portions of the risk area -- from Wisconsin
    southwestward to Oklahoma/North Texas. As an upper low shifts
    northeastward across the northern Plains toward the upper
    Mississippi Valley through the day, and the cold front crosses Iowa/Missouri/eastern Oklahoma, steep lapse rates atop a
    moist/diurnally heating warm sector will support widespread
    convective development.

    With ascent along the front somewhat modest as stronger large-scale
    ascent focuses northward into the western Upper Great Lakes and into
    Ontario, storm mode may tend toward isolated storms, as opposed to
    more linear development. This, combined with flow that is forecast
    to weakly veer but dramatically strengthen with height, suggests a
    primarily supercell storm mode. In additional to very large hail
    (particularly with southward extent), widespread damaging winds and
    several tornadoes are expected, some possibly significant. Risk is
    expected to continue well into the evening and likely overnight,
    shifting slowly eastward across the Midwest and mid/lower
    Mississippi Valley through the end of the period.

    Day 5/Thursday, trailing portions of the cold front should become
    aligned east-northeast to west-southwest across the Ohio and mid
    Mississippi Valleys and into the southern Plains, as the upper
    system shifts quickly across eastern Canada. While weak short-wave
    ridging will evolve atop the surface frontal zone in the wake of the
    departing system, daytime heating of a very moist boundary layer
    along and south of the front combined with strong flow aloft will
    support reinvigorated convection through the afternoon and evening
    hours, along with attendant severe-weather risk.

    Day 6/Friday, the surface front should remain quasi-stationary, but
    short-wave ridging should increase as a cut-off low evolves across
    the West. As such, much of the Day 6 convection may occur to the
    cool side of the surface front, in the zone of warm
    advection/isentropic ascent. While some severe risk will likely
    evolve, mainly in the form of hail, uncertainty overall (given the
    ridging aloft) precludes inclusion of a Day 6 risk area.

    By the weekend, deviation in model solutions increases, due to
    uncertain evolution of the low/trough over the West. As such, no
    risk areas will be included.

    ..Goss.. 03/30/2025
    $$
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