Probability of a tornado within 25 miles of a point. Hatched Area: 10% or greater probability of EF2 - EF5 tornadoes within 25 miles of a point.
Day 1 Tornado Risk
Area (sq. mi.)
Area Pop.
Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
5 %
60,208
2,407,979
Omaha, NE...Lincoln, NE...Sioux City, IA...Council Bluffs, IA...Bellevue, NE...
2 %
158,438
11,705,996
Oklahoma City, OK...Kansas City, MO...Tulsa, OK...Minneapolis, MN...Wichita, KS...
Probabilistic Damaging Wind Graphic
Probability of damaging thunderstorm winds or wind gusts of 50 knots or higher within 25 miles of a point. Hatched Area: 10% of greater probability of wind gusts 65 knots or greater within 25 miles of a point.
Day 1 Wind Risk
Area (sq. mi.)
Area Pop.
Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
SIG SEVERE
53,164
1,298,244
Wichita, KS...Enid, OK...Salina, KS...Hutchinson, KS...Dodge City, KS...
Probability of hail 1" or larger within 25 miles of a point. Hatched Area: 10% or greater probability of hail 2" or larger within 25 miles of a point.
Day 1 Hail Risk
Area (sq. mi.)
Area Pop.
Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
SIG SEVERE
84,149
2,302,319
Omaha, NE...Lincoln, NE...Sioux City, IA...Council Bluffs, IA...Bellevue, NE...
45 %
5,911
49,097
Dodge City, KS...
30 %
56,862
1,772,246
Lincoln, NE...Sioux City, IA...Salina, KS...Grand Island, NE...Kearney, NE...
15 %
148,742
8,463,464
Kansas City, MO...Omaha, NE...Tulsa, OK...Wichita, KS...Overland Park, KS...
5 %
324,288
16,067,629
Oklahoma City, OK...Minneapolis, MN...St. Paul, MN...Plano, TX...Garland, TX...
SPC AC 211657
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1157 AM CDT Sun Jun 21 2020
Valid 211630Z - 221200Z
...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS SOUTHWEST
KANSAS/NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA...
...SUMMARY...
Numerous severe storms are expected across the Plains, especially
across southern/eastern Nebraska, western Iowa, and portions of
Kansas and Oklahoma late this afternoon and tonight. Very large
hail, intense damaging wind gusts, and a few tornadoes will be
possible.
...Central/Southern Plains...
Severe thunderstorms are likely across the region, particularly late
this afternoon and tonight across eastern/southern Nebraska, far
western Iowa, and portions of Kansas/Oklahoma.
A slow-moving MCS continues to gradually decay across southern
Oklahoma and north Texas, with this MCS having largely overturned
the air mass across the middle part of Oklahoma/I-35 corridor
vicinity. However, strong destabilization is expected especially on
the western periphery of the MCS where outflow will continue to
modify and the thicker cloud canopy will gradually thin. As sampled
by 12Z observed soundings such as Amarillo/Dodge City, a plume of
steep mid-level lapse rates will extend atop a moist boundary layer,
with upwards of 3000-4500 J/kg MLCAPE expected by peak heating
near/east of a surface low/triple point across west-central Kansas,
southward into the eastern Texas Panhandle/western Oklahoma
near/east of the dryline. Deep convective initiation may occur as
early as mid-afternoon across west-central Kansas, with subsequent
development expected across southwest Kansas and possibly the Texas
Panhandle/Oklahoma border vicinity. Initial supercells capable of
very large hail can be expected, along with some tornado risk.
Storms are expected to gradually congeal/organize into a
forward-propagating/southeastward-moving MCS this evening, with the
greatest risk for a corridor of potentially widespread severe wind
gusts (some significant 75+ mph) and wind-driven hail expected
across southwest Kansas into northwest Oklahoma.
Farther north, an isolated short-term severe threat may persist
early this afternoon across north-central Kansas, but a more
consequential severe risk should evolve later this afternoon. This
convection across eastern/south-central Nebraska and north-central
Kansas has complicated the scenario to a degree, but severe
thunderstorm development is still expected later this afternoon,
particularly where outflow intercepts the front across
eastern/south-central Nebraska. Severe wind/hail are the primary
hazards with some initial supercells likely evolving into
southeastward-moving clusters this evening.
...ArkLaTex/Lower Mississippi Valley...
Remnant MCS outflow/MCV may focus renewed severe thunderstorm
development later this afternoon across the ArkLaTex and Lower
Mississippi River Valley, with isolated damaging wind gusts and some
severe hail a possibility.
...Ohio/Tennessee Valleys...
An MCV over far western Kentucky will drift across the Ohio Valley
today. Diabatic heating will be slowed near the MCV by relatively
widespread early-day stratiform. Nevertheless, boundary-layer
heating farther east and south of the morning precip may overlap
with modest enhancement to mid-level flow to support multicell
clustering. Isolated damaging winds should be the primary threat.
..Guyer/Nauslar.. 06/21/2020
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