Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Tulsa, OK

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000 FXUS64 KTSA 232002 AFDTSA Area Forecast Discussion National Weather Service Tulsa OK 302 PM CDT Tue Apr 23 2024 ...New SHORT TERM, LONG TERM... .SHORT TERM...
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(Through tonight ) Issued at 223 PM CDT Tue Apr 23 2024 Cold front is presently moving into northeast OK, and is expected to continue pushing south tonight in response to northern stream wave moving across the Great Lakes area. Modest instability has developed in an axis near and south of the boundary, and convergence along it may result in isolated to scattered showers and thunderstorms, with highest prob across northwest AR, where weaker capping in present. Relatively weak instability and modest shear should keep severe threat minimal. Boundary is expected to eventually stall close to the Red R. by Wednesday morning.
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&& .LONG TERM...
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(Tomorrow through Tuesday) Issued at 223 PM CDT Tue Apr 23 2024 BLUF: An active period of spring weather is still shaping up for the latter half of the week and early next weekend with the ejection of a pair of strong, negatively tilted shortwaves eject over the plains. Severe weather potential increases substantially in the Friday/Saturday periods, potentially lingering into Sunday. At this time all modes appear to be possible, with a bit more emphasis on Saturday/early Sunday for eastern OK and western AR. In addition, potential for heavy or localized excessive rainfall amounts will increase with multiple rounds of convection through early Sunday. Forecasts should be watched closely over the next few days as the overall pattern, along with the calendar, are both quite favorable for severe weather. In the meantime, expansion of elevated convection appears likely from Wed into early Thursday as the front slowly begins to lift back to the north with richer low level moisture arriving, especially by Wed night as low level flow really begins to respond to the first strong system. While convection should remain mostly evaluated, the environment becomes increasingly sheared and unstable, and thus potential for large hail becomes greater. The first system is expected to move over the CO Rockies by Tuesday evening and lift northeast into the Central Plains by midday Friday, with strong deep layer wind fields spreading over the area by early Friday morning. This timing isn`t optimal for severe weather, but there remains a decent signal for storms to develop on the dry line Thursday evening and eventually move east early Friday, with some severe threat maintained overnight into morning. Some re-intensification of storms also possible by afternoon, though by that time the more favorable shear to become focused to our northeast. All indications are that the pattern will reload rather quickly in response to the next strong system, which at this point looks to arrive at a more favorable time of day. Sfc low quickly re- organizes over southwest KS/southeast CO by late afternoon with strong wind fields again spreading over the region. The Saturday evening period appears to be the favored one for parameters to line up for a more substantial severe threat, which could continue well into Saturday night as the system lifts northeast and the Pacific cold front slowly moves east. The details regarding storm mode and evolution remain uncertain this far out and will be influenced to some degree by what happens Friday. Some potential will continue into Sunday as well, at least early in the day. Monday and Tuesday will be a dry forecast for right now, though some data suggests the deep moisture never quite get pushed south of the area.
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&& .AVIATION... (18Z TAFS) Issued at 1148 AM CDT Tue Apr 23 2024 A front will move through the area from late this afternoon into the evening, leading to a shift from south to southwest winds to north to northeast behind it. The front should hang up across southeast Oklahoma and into west central Arkansas overnight, providing a focus for scattered showers/storms overnight. Given the expected coverage, will keep a VCSH at all sites except those in NE OK. IFR/MVFR ceilings will be most likely at MLC/FSM with moisture increasing along/south of the front and will forecast prevailing restricted ceilings there for the latter part of the period. Better shower and thunderstorm chances will arrive toward the last few hours of the period and after, affecting mainly the E OK sites, with enough potential at FSM to also mention a PROB30 there. && .PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS...
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TUL 53 73 58 75 / 10 60 80 90 FSM 60 75 59 72 / 30 60 70 80 MLC 59 72 63 79 / 20 60 70 60 BVO 48 73 53 72 / 0 50 80 90 FYV 51 75 54 68 / 50 30 80 80 BYV 51 73 54 64 / 50 20 70 80 MKO 56 72 58 73 / 20 60 80 80 MIO 49 73 55 67 / 10 20 80 90 F10 57 71 60 75 / 20 60 80 70 HHW 61 75 63 77 / 20 40 40 30
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&& .TSA WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... OK...None. AR...None. && $$ SHORT TERM...14 LONG TERM....14 AVIATION...22

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