• DAY2 3/5 Risk US Midwest

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Sun Apr 27 08:20:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 270600
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 270559

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1259 AM CDT Sun Apr 27 2025

    Valid 281200Z - 291200Z

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM CENTRAL
    IOWA INTO SOUTHEAST MINNESOTA AND WESTERN WISCONSIN...

    ...SUMMARY...
    An outbreak of severe weather remains likely across portions of the
    Upper Midwest, centered on Monday afternoon and evening. Very large
    hail, strong tornadoes, and damaging winds are expected.

    ...Synopsis...
    A strong (~75 knot) mid-level jet streak will advance from the
    central Plains to the Upper Midwest on Monday. As this occurs, a
    surface low will deepen across the Upper Midwest with an eastward
    advancing dryline to its south and a cold front to the
    west-southwest. A warm front will extend east of this surface low
    and move rapidly north through the day, spreading mid 60s dewpoints
    across much of the Upper Midwest.

    ...MN/IA/WI...
    Thunderstorms will likely be ongoing at the beginning of the period
    north of a warm front across Minnesota and Wisconsin amid moderate
    isentropic ascent. Isolated large hail will be possible from these
    storms. A surface low will be located somewhere near eastern South
    Dakota and will start to advance east during the morning. This
    surface low is expected to deepen somewhat through the day (perhaps
    to the low 990s mb range) as it moves toward the Twin Cities. There
    is a consistent signal for thunderstorms to develop along the cold
    front as it intersects the surface low/dryline in west-central
    Minnesota Monday afternoon. After some initial hail threat, these
    storms will likely become quickly linear along the front with an
    increasing severe wind threat. Strong low-level shear will also
    favor some line-embedded tornadoes, particularly if there area any
    areas within the line which become more favorably oriented to the
    low-level shear vector.

    Additional thunderstorms are forecast to develop along the dryline
    from southern Minnesota to west-central Iowa during the afternoon on
    Monday. 00Z CAM guidance is not overly bullish with convective
    development south of the MN/IA border, likely due to relatively weak convergence along the dryline in western Iowa from most high
    resolution guidance. However, the lack of convection from much of
    the guidance does not seem realistic considering the overall
    pattern. ECMWF/GFS/NAM are fairly consistent with a deepening
    surface low across Minnesota and moderate to strong height falls
    across the dryline. The southern extent of the previous Day 3
    moderate risk corresponds well to the southern extent of the more
    favorable height falls, and convective precipitation signal from the
    ECMWF/GFS. Therefore, no adjustments to the southern extent of the
    moderate risk were deemed necessary. However the moderate risk was
    expanded slightly westward to account for the expectation for
    earlier convective initiation (19-21Z) than shown by most guidance.
    Given very strong effective shear and over 3000 J/kg MLCAPE, expect
    any supercells which develop to become quickly severe with a threat
    for all severe weather hazards.

    As the surface low across Minnesota deepens the low-level jet is
    also forecast to strengthen across Iowa, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
    This will elongate low-level hodographs and support an increasing
    tornado threat during the evening. STP values of 3 to 5 are common
    across much of the warm sector ahead of anticipated storms with some
    guidance indicating values of 7 to 10. Therefore, any mature,
    discrete supercells which can form and maintain within the open warm
    sector on Monday late afternoon/evening will pose a threat for
    strong to potentially intense tornadoes.

    ...Eastern Kansas and northern Missouri to West Texas...
    Overall forcing will be weaker farther south along the dryline, but
    subtle height falls across a mostly uncapped warm sector could
    result in isolated to scattered supercell development Monday
    afternoon. A secondary area of higher severe weather probabilities
    may exist from portions of West Texas into southwest Oklahoma where
    the nocturnally strengthening low-level jet could support scattered
    supercell development Monday evening. However, weak height rises
    cast some doubt on storm coverage during the evening, precluding
    higher probabilities at this time.

    ..Bentley.. 04/27/2025

    $$
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