Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Oklahoma City, OK

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FXUS64 KOUN 230818 CCA
AFDOUN

Area Forecast Discussion...CORRECTED
National Weather Service Norman OK
318 AM CDT Sat Mar 23 2024

...New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM...

.SHORT TERM...
(Today and tonight)
Issued at 307 AM CDT Sat Mar 23 2024

Benign weather is expected today as a shortwave ridge axis passes
overhead. Temperatures will be starting off from a slightly below-
average morning low, so even with plentiful sunshine expected, light
northerly winds during the morning will be enough to keep highs in
the low 60s. Those northerly winds will veer around to easterly and
then southerly this afternoon as the ridge axis passes by and a
speed max approaches the southern Plains.

With the approach of the speed max and height falls commencing
tonight, a northward return of the modified Gulf airmass from the
previous two days will occur. This will keep lows tonight rather
mild, and will also aid in the development of widespread cloud
cover. The most notable weather impact tonight will be the beginning
of a prolonged period of very windy weather, as 6-hour pressure
falls of up to 6 mb will occur across the Palmer Divide region and
the pressure gradient will dramatically sharpen across our CWA.
Southerly winds will increase to up to 25 knots in northwest
Oklahoma by daybreak with gusts nearing 40 mph.

Meister

&&

.LONG TERM...
(Sunday through Friday)
Issued at 307 AM CDT Sat Mar 23 2024

Sunday is still likely to be the most impactful weather day of the
upcoming week on multiple fronts within our area. The bottom-line:
confidence is high in a period of very strong winds across western
and northern Oklahoma with widespread gusts in excess of 50 mph
expected. Confidence is medium-high in a potentially volatile fire
environment along and west of a Pacific front that will enter our
western counties by midafternoon. And confidence is low-medium in
severe weather potential, with the risk for scattered discrete
supercells to develop with all hazards possible across north central
Oklahoma late in the afternoon. A technical breakdown with some of
the nitty-gritty details is included below.

High Winds:

Grand ensemble guidance has backed off ever-so-slightly compared to
24 hours ago regarding the maximum wind gusts expected across
northern and western Oklahoma, likely due to the potential for
rather expansive midlevel cloud cover during the afternoon. This
means that most area`s maximum wind gusts might be more in the 50-55
mph vicinity than 55-60 mph, but will still be plenty for potential
infrastructure/powerline issues. The periods of highest winds are
broken into two meteorologically distinct regimes. The first will
begin early in the morning and last through about midday as the core
of an extremely powerful 75 knot southerly LLJ passes over northwest
Oklahoma. After the LLJ shifts off to the east and the Pacific front
mixes eastward, a period of very strong westerly winds is probable
across western Oklahoma within the descending branch of a robust
LLTR. Within both of these regimes, the loss of daylight heating and
a slight slackening of the pressure gradient will lead winds to
recede below the impactful level by midnight.

Fire Weather:

Confidence has increased relative to 24 hours ago regarding the
placement of the Pacific front by midafternoon and subsequent
gusty/torching conditions that will rapidly escalate fire weather.
The "undermixed" set of short-range models (the NAM and NSSL WRF)
depict the boundary to be right along the 100th meridian by 21Z,
while the "overmixed models (HRRR/RAP/RRFS and the MPAS cores) show
the front a full county further to the east. Given the limited green-
up and lack of precipitation over the last few weeks, would lean
toward the overmixed set of models, and this is reflected in the
forecast grids. Behind the front, relative humidity will drop as low
as 15 percent with the aforementioned 50 mph gusts possible. The
HRRR, TTU WRF, and MPAS models all depict a narrow but robust LLTR
with temperatures 5-10 degrees warmer than locations east/west of
it. The eastern fringe of this LLTR will be watched closely for the
greatest fire potential - this roughly will coincide with the
western tier of counties in Oklahoma, where critical fire weather is
expected. Near-critical fire weather may also occur in the adjacent
tier of counties in western north Texas, but recent rainfall has
been much more beneficial there.

Severe Weather:

Moisture return will be the main question ahead of the arrival of
the upper trough Sunday afternoon and evening. Models continue to
show the relative dry/mixed patch in southern Texas advecting into
western Oklahoma by the afternoon, which may lessen boundary layer
moisture content.

With that said, an extremely narrow axis of instability will set up
just east of the Pacific front by the afternoon as very cold
temperatures arrive aloft. Given the amount of forcing available, it
is nearly certain that convection initiation of some sort will
occur. What nature that CI takes is an open question - updrafts may
struggle with the meager instability and decay as soon as they move
of of the dryline circulation, or they may rapidly evolve into very
low-topped supercells. If the latter occurs, it would most likely be
across north central Oklahoma. Shear profiles and thermodynamics
would favor the very efficient production of large to very large
hail, and if storms are able to organize rapidly enough within
that unstable axis, low-level mesocyclones could develop quickly
with a threat for tornadoes. The tornado threat will be highly
limited in temporal nature, as storms will outrun the instability
axis within 2-3 hours at the most. Confidence that supercells
develop is low- medium.

As the Pacific front advances eastward overnight, richer boundary
layer moisture will advect northward. This will favor the
development of a squall line along and south of I-40. Given the
continued presence of a 50 knot LLJ, damaging wind gusts and
mesovortex-generated tornadoes are possible within this squall line.
Confidence that the squall line develops is low-medium.

Remainder of the week:

After all of that fun, a cold front will push on through Sunday
night into Monday morning. We will experience a couple of days of
dry weather with well-below-average temperatures, including the
likelihood of a hard freeze along and north of I-40 on Tuesday. A
slow moderating trend will begin by the middle of the week, with
highs finally returning to or above normal by Thursday. A period of
precipitation looks possible on Wednesday morning, and this may need
to be watched for some light snow across northwest Oklahoma.
Confidence in any winter precipitation is very low.

Meister

&&

.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 950 PM CDT Fri Mar 22 2024

VFR is expected until 232400. Gusty north wind will slowly
subside tonight and become gusty from the south in western
Oklahoma Saturday afternoon and through the evening.

&&

.PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
Oklahoma City OK  62  52  67  49 /   0  10  50  60
Hobart OK         62  51  73  43 /   0  10  50  20
Wichita Falls TX  65  55  73  50 /   0   0  30  30
Gage OK           64  49  77  33 /   0  10  40  10
Ponca City OK     59  48  64  45 /   0  10  80  70
Durant OK         67  50  67  55 /   0   0  30  80

&&

.OUN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
OK...High Wind Watch from Sunday morning through late Sunday night
     for OKZ004>006-009>011-014>018-021>024-033>035.

     Fire Weather Watch from Sunday afternoon through Sunday evening
     for OKZ004-009-014-021-033-034.

TX...None.
&&

$$

SHORT TERM...04
LONG TERM....04
AVIATION...09


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