• DAY 1 3/5 RISK AR to IL

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Apr 20 18:25:50 2025
    ACUS01 KWNS 201955
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 201953

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0253 PM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025

    Valid 202000Z - 211200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NORTHERN
    ARKANSAS AND MISSOURI VICINITY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe thunderstorms are expected today across parts of the ArkLaTex
    into the Ozarks and mid Mississippi Valley, mainly this afternoon
    and evening. The best corridor for tornadoes (some of which could be
    strong) and scattered to numerous damaging winds should exist from central/northern Arkansas into Missouri.

    ...20z Update..
    A broken line of thunderstorm activity continues near the surface
    low in northeastern OK/southeastern KS and along an attendant
    surface cold front extending from eastern OK southward into
    northeastern Texas/southern Arkansas. This activity is expected to
    continue to shift north and eastward through time as the low tracks
    to the east through the afternoon and evening.

    Storm intensity has been increasing over the last couple of hours,
    owing to daytime heating ahead of the front, where MLCAPE around
    500-1500 J/kg is observed in surface objective analysis. VAD
    profiles across eastern Arkansas northward into Missouri show strong
    low-level shear in place, with large curved hodographs and rich
    low-level SRH. This trend will continue with the strengthening
    low-level jet lifting through the Mississippi Valley into the
    Midwest this evening, supporting risk for embedded supercells and
    tornadoes, a few of which may be strong. In addition to the tornado
    threat, bowing structures along the front will support risk for
    damaging winds. See MCD#502 and MCD#504 for more information.

    Thunderstorm coverage will increase along the southern portion of
    the front in central/eastern Texas into Louisiana through the
    afternoon and evening. This region is somewhat removed from the area
    of greater low and mid-level flow, which will keep severe potential
    more limited. See previous discussion for more information.

    ..Thornton/Goss.. 04/20/2025

    .PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1129 AM CDT Sun Apr 20 2025/

    ...Synopsis...
    A compact upper low currently moving into western Oklahoma will
    shift quickly northeastward this afternoon and tonight, crossing
    eastern Kansas and western Missouri this evening and then continuing northeastward across Iowa and into Wisconsin tonight. Fast
    southwesterly flow aloft will exist in advance of this system,
    within the tight height gradient between this feature and the
    persistent ridge centered over the Southeast.

    At the surface, a developing low analyzed over western Oklahoma at
    15Z is forecast to progress northeastward across southeastern Kansas
    and Missouri through the afternoon, and then should continue
    northward toward -- and eventually into -- southern Wisconsin by
    early Monday morning. While a warm front lifts northward across the
    Mid Mississippi Valley/Midwest, a cold front trailing from the low
    will sweep eastward into/across Missouri and Arkansas this afternoon
    and evening, and then across the Mid and Lower Mississippi Valleys
    through the end of the period.

    ...Northeastern Texas northeastward to the western Illinois
    vicinity...
    An expansive area of multi-level cloud cover, along with ongoing
    convection, is evident across western and northern portions of the
    risk area late this morning, which continues to retard more
    substantial heating at this point. With that said, some breaks in
    the clouds are evident per recent visible imagery as far west as
    eastern Oklahoma, with thinning cloud cover with
    eastward/northeastward extent into Arkansas and the Ozarks.

    As the surface low over Oklahoma deepens through the day in tandem
    with the advance of the upper low, northward advance of the warm
    front with time will allow a moist boundary layer to likewise
    overspread much of Missouri and Illinois through sunset. This,
    combined with at least modest heating across portions of the area
    should yield an amply unstable environment (500 to near 1500 J/kg
    mixed-layer CAPE) to gradually evolve -- supporting a steady
    increase in convective coverage and intensity this afternoon.

    In contrast to the rather modest thermodynamic environment, a very
    favorable low-level and deep-layer wind field is evident, with
    respect to development of organized/rotating storms. An 80 kt
    mid-level jet will spread northeastward across the risk area with
    time, atop a 50-plus kt low-level jet. This will support vigorous
    updraft evolution, with all-hazards severe risk evolving as a
    result. At this time, it remains apparent that tornado potential --
    including risk for a couple of strong tornadoes -- should maximize
    across the Ozarks, and areas just north and south, as surface winds
    back to southeasterly ahead of the deepening/advancing surface low.
    The primary risk should evolve with an anticipated, broken band of
    storms within the cold-frontal zone, including embedded supercells.

    Along with the tornado potential, fairly widespread coverage of
    damaging wind gusts is also expected, as complex, LEWP/bow-type
    structures are expected within the band of storms, as convection
    advances eastward across Missouri and Arkansas toward the
    Mississippi Valley through the afternoon and into the evening hours.
    Severe risk is expected to expand as far north as southeastern Iowa
    and adjacent western Illinois this evening, where weaker instability
    is expected, and as far south as eastern Texas where a weaker wind
    field with southward extent should limit severe potential on the
    southern fringe. Risk should very gradually diminish overnight as
    convection shifts eastward across the Mid-Mississippi Valley.

    $$
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