• DAY2 ENHANCED RISK South

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Fri Feb 14 10:07:00 2025
    ACUS02 KWNS 140652
    SWODY2
    SPC AC 140650

    Day 2 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1250 AM CST Fri Feb 14 2025

    Valid 151200Z - 161200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS EXTREME
    EAST TEXAS...NORTHERN LOUISIANA...SOUTHEAST ARKANSAS...SOUTHWEST TENNESSEE...MUCH OF MISSISSIPPI...AND WEST-CENTRAL ALABAMA...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Severe weather is expected from East Texas into much of the
    Southeast and parts of the Mid-South on Saturday. Scattered to
    numerous damaging wind gusts and a few tornadoes are the primary
    threats. Storms are expected from late afternoon through the
    overnight hours.

    ...Mid-South and Southeast...

    An upper trough will migrate east across the Plains to the MS Valley
    on Saturday. Strong southwesterly deep-layer flow, characterized by
    a 500 mb jet streak around 80-100 kt, will overspread the region,
    mainly near/after 00z. As stronger height falls approach the
    ArkLaTex and MS Valley, a low-level jet greater than 50 kt will
    develop from LA into TN/KY. Meanwhile at the surface, southerly
    low-level flow will allow 60s F dewpoints to march northward,
    reaching as far north as western TN. Boundary-layer moisture into
    the mid-60s F is expected to remain south of the MS/TN border.

    A surface low is expected to deepen during the afternoon into the
    nighttime hours as it tracks from AR to OH. A cold front attendant
    to the low will sweep east/southeast from late afternoon into early
    Sunday. Warm advection across this boundary will result in
    widespread showers and isolated thunderstorms from east TX into the
    Lower OH Valley for much of the day. This will limit the northward
    extent of the advancing warm sector, with a warm front expected to
    stall across TN into northern GA. Large-scale ascent is not expected
    to overspread the region until evening, so open warm sector
    convection likely will remain limited diurnally.

    By late afternoon, more robust convection is expected to develop
    along the sharpening cold front from eastern AR into east TX/western
    LA within a plume of 1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE and strong vertical
    shear. A QLCS producing a swath of damaging gusts is likely to move
    across the region through the overnight hours. Favorable low-level
    shear, characterized by enlarged, looping hodographs suggests
    tornadoes also will be possible with mesovortex formation along the
    line, in addition to any line-embedded supercells. A more
    conditional threat exists with any supercells that can develop ahead
    of the line in the open warm sector, something that remains
    uncertain at this time. Any cells that do develop ahead of the line
    will pose a risk for tornadoes and damaging gusts, and could also
    pose a risk for increasing tornado potential as they interact with the QLCS.

    The north and east extent of the severe risk areas remains a bit
    uncertain, in part due to cold air damming into the southern
    Appalachians and how much this is able to erode. A general decrease
    in boundary-layer moisture and instability is expected with
    northeast extent during the overnight hours. However, the expected
    intense deep-layer wind field will likely maintain some damaging
    wind and tornado risk into AL and perhaps parts of western GA.

    ..Leitman.. 02/14/2025

    $$
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