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June 5th-September 1st, 2023 | Severe Storm Sequence


Iceresistance

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This new storm development later in the day should be existing in an area of high parameters- CAPE, storm-relative helicity, shear, strong parameters for tornadoes.

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This is what you get when you put on the closed captioning on a youtube video about severe weather (Convective Chronicles)

Stormwater Publicity

Storm related Felcity 

Low-level Holograph

also (not shown) joules per kilogram of cake

effective storm related felicity2.jpg

low level holographs2.jpg

effective stormwater publicity3.jpg

Edited by Chinook
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43 minutes ago, Chinook said:

This new storm development later in the day should be existing in an area of high parameters- CAPE, storm-relative helicity, shear, strong parameters for tornadoes.

refcmp_uh001h.us_sc.thumb.png.8941fcfe455b4f23330a64b5b69d0c87.png

This is what you get when you put on the closed captioning on a youtube video about severe weather (Convective Chronicles)

Stormwater Publicity

Storm related Felcity 

Low-level Holograph

also (not shown) joules per kilogram of cake

effective storm related felicity2.jpg

low level holographs2.jpg

effective stormwater publicity3.jpg

Cake?

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10% hatched for tornadoes has been introduced, however it will be an all-hazards event. Pretty high-end for August, 2023 has been crazy. 

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Quote
SPC AC 091641

   Day 1 Convective Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   1141 AM CDT Wed Aug 09 2023

   Valid 091630Z - 101200Z

   ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
   OZARKS/MID-SOUTH AND TENNESSEE VALLEY...

   ...SUMMARY...
   Multiple rounds of significant severe thunderstorms with tornadoes,
   damaging winds, and large hail are possible from the Ozarks to the
   Tennessee Valley this afternoon into tonight.

   ...Ozarks/Mid-South/Tennessee Valley...
   Today's severe-weather scenario remains rather complex, largely
   owing to persistent regenerative precipitation through midday across
   the Ozarks southwestward into eastern Oklahoma. Short-term guidance
   appears to be reflecting typical biases/tendencies regarding
   later-day destabilization, with the 12z NAM likely too aggressive in
   destabilization (especially with northward extent), with recent RAP
   runs much more muted buoyancy-wise and southward focused. 

   Regardless of some uncertainties as far as thermodynamic details and
   meso-beta spatial preferred severe corridors, rather active
   severe-weather potential still appears likely across the region
   later today into tonight, especially in deference to seasonally
   strong wind fields.

   Initially, ongoing convection across the Mid-South, in vicinity of
   far eastern Arkansas and western Tennessee at late morning, may
   intensify and gradually become surface-based this afternoon as it
   progresses generally eastward across the Tennessee Valley,
   especially on the southwest flank of these storms in proximity to
   the warm front. A favorable wind profile, increasing low-level
   moisture, and the eastern edge of steeper lapse rates aloft
   (reference 12z observed soundings from Little Rock and Jackson) will
   support some supercells capable of large hail, along with some
   tornado potential. Damaging winds will also be possible as activity
   congeals into clusters across the Tennessee Valley through the
   afternoon. For additional short-term details (through early
   afternoon), see Mesoscale Discussion 1914.

   After a relatively short convective lull (a few hours at most), a
   secondary round of severe thunderstorms is expected to initiate
   near/ahead of the surface cold front/inverted trough across parts of
   central to southern Missouri into eastern Oklahoma during the late
   afternoon, with outflow/meso-beta zones of differential heating
   influential as well. As related to the previously discussed
   thermodynamic uncertainties, the northward-extent (namely across
   Missouri) of the more intense/higher-coverage severe storms will be
   highly dependent upon relatively quick/substantive clearing this
   afternoon. 

   Deep-layer shear vectors will be at least semi-orthogonal to the
   initiating front and should support initially discrete supercells
   amid 45-60 kt effective bulk shear. Strengthening low-level
   southwesterlies during the evening will further enlarge hodograph
   curvature across southern Missouri and northern Arkansas. This could
   foster potential for a couple strong tornadoes, but some of this
   depends on the evolution of the low-level thermodynamic fields in
   the wake of early day convection. 

   Where storms intensify/mature, upscale growth is likely this evening
   as low to mid-level flow fields strengthen ahead of the shortwave
   trough tracking towards the middle Mississippi Valley. This should
   result in an MCS tracking southeast along the baroclinic zone
   trailing northwest in the wake of the early-day
   storms. The spatial extent and amplitude of severe wind gusts will
   be modulated by cold pools from prior convection and background
   nocturnal stabilization to some degree. But given 65-80 kt
   rear-inflow low-level winds depicted in some guidance, there is
   conditional potential for a more widespread damaging wind threat
   with embedded significant severe surface gusts and QLCS tornadoes
   amid bowing structures/mesovortices. 

   ...Upper Midwest from eastern Dakotas to northern Michigan...
   Thunderstorms are expected to develop/increase by late afternoon
   along a southward sagging front across a broad west-to-east expanse,
   likely in a very isolated manner across the Dakotas with a bit more
   of a concentration (scattered) across eastern Minnesota into
   northwest/north-central Wisconsin, and possibly northern Michigan.
   These storms will mature in an environment with only modest buoyancy
   (MLCAPE between 500-1000 J/kg), but effective shear values between
   30-35 kt. Given storm motions and deep-layer shear vectors largely
   off the front, discrete to semi-discrete storms are probable.
   Isolated instances of severe hail and wind are possible, mainly late
   this afternoon through early evening.

   ..Guyer/Squitieri.. 08/09/2023

 

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5 minutes ago, ElectricStorm said:

Still thick clouds here and with the amount of morning convection I'm still a bit skeptical about the tor threat. Should be some nasty cells though 

I would normally be a bit skeptical too, but when there's convection over a rising effective warm-front it seems to take a lot less time to destabilize, going to be an interesting and complex day from a forecasting perspective. If anything, I would shift the tornado threat a bit south, I still think S MO could see a tornado or two but N AR would definitely be my target, especially if a discrete storm or two can form. 

Edited by Neoncyclone
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Phew, it's supercell galore in Alabama, luckily most of the rotations looks relatively weak right now. If I had to bet on any of them to have a chance, it'd be the two supercells just north-west of Birmingham.

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Mesoanalysis shows that there should be some tornado potential with these storms.

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Edited by Neoncyclone
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2 hours ago, ElectricStorm said:

Looks like the morning convection ended up winning out and preventing the second round from really ramping up. 

Could've been a really nasty day, luckily storms failed to convect further south in AR where the atmosphere was absolutely primed to go. The warm-front pretty much set up over S MO, that also helped as if it had lifted north a bit more the morning convection might not have mattered.

Edited by Neoncyclone
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