Severe Storm Outlook Narrative (AC)
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217
ACUS01 KWNS 241647
SWODY1
SPC AC 241645

Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1145 AM CDT Tue Sep 24 2024

Valid 241630Z - 251200Z

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF
TN/KY/OH/WV AND CENTRAL OK...

...SUMMARY...
Isolated to scattered severe thunderstorms are possible mainly this
afternoon across portions of the Ohio and Tennessee Valleys into the
central/southern Appalachians. Severe storms will also be possible
across portions of Oklahoma.

...Ohio and Tennessee Valleys to southern Appalachians...
Have spatially adjusted/expanded the Slight Risk based on
observational trends and somewhat stronger destabilization across
areas such as northern/middle Tennessee. Water-vapor imagery shows a
mid-level vorticity maximum moving across the middle Mississippi
Valley and into the Ohio Valley. A belt of moderate to strong
southwesterly 500-mb flow (25-50 kt) will overspread Kentucky and
the surrounding states. A surface low will migrate east-northeast
into southern Lower Michigan by early evening, where isolated severe
storms are possible, with a frontal zone extending south-southwest
from this low into the Mid South.

In the wake of early morning convection, modest cloud
breaks/destabilization is forecast with upwards of 750-2000 J/kg
MLCAPE from the southern Great Lakes into the southern Appalachians,
with the strongest destabilization expected across Tennessee into
southern Kentucky and possibly the western Carolinas pending the
timing/abatement of lingering cloud cover. Regionally, ample
deep-layer speed shear will aid in storm organization into organized
multicells and probably several supercells. Damaging winds will be
the most common hazard, but isolated large hail will be possible,
and some tornado risk may exist as well.

...Oklahoma/North Texas...
Have upgraded portions of central Oklahoma for what is expected to
be a semi-focused regional corridor of large hail potential late
this afternoon and early evening. The region will be influenced by
the immediate backside of a southeastward-moving upper-level trough
centered over the Lower Missouri Valley. A considerably
strengthening cyclonically curved belt of westerlies aloft will
influence Oklahoma, overspreading a relatively moist air mass, with
lower to some middle 60s F surface dewpoints likely to persist
through the diurnal heating/mixing cycle.

Near a deepening surface low and nearby triple point/warm front, at
least isolated storms are expected to develop as early as
mid-afternoon (3-4pm), becoming more probable with a greater
coverage through sunset. Overall buoyancy will not be robust, with
MLCAPE generally not expected to exceed 1000 J/kg later this
afternoon. However, this buoyancy, along with steep lapse rates and
robustly vertically veering wind profiles, accentuated by 35-45 kt
northwesterly mid/upper-level flow, should support initial
supercells capable of large hail (potentially golfball size), along
with some potential for damaging wind gusts.

These storms will persist generally southeastward through the
evening into southern/southeast Oklahoma, and probably north Texas
overnight. Overall intensity will tend to wane nocturnally after
sunset, but some severe hail/wind potential will probably linger,
particularly on the west/southwest flank of any evolving clusters of
storms, which will be increasingly elevated to the east of the warm
front.

..Guyer/Lyons.. 09/24/2024

$$