Minneapolis, MN...St. Paul, MN...Plymouth, MN...Brooklyn Park, MN...Coon Rapids, MN...
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
36,667
850,745
Lincoln, NE...Manhattan, KS...Grand Island, NE...Kearney, NE...North Platte, NE...
30 %
32,675
496,355
Grand Island, NE...Kearney, NE...Hastings, NE...Columbus, NE...Beatrice, NE...
15 %
184,539
9,662,031
Omaha, NE...Minneapolis, MN...St. Paul, MN...Lincoln, NE...Sioux Falls, SD...
5 %
202,863
13,942,869
Kansas City, MO...Wichita, KS...Worcester, MA...Overland Park, KS...Springfield, MA...
Probabilistic Large Hail Graphic
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
15 %
126,163
5,303,612
Minneapolis, MN...St. Paul, MN...Sioux Falls, SD...Duluth, MN...Bloomington, MN...
5 %
155,704
3,666,009
Sioux City, IA...Eau Claire, WI...Rapid City, SD...Lakeville, MN...Burlington, VT...
SPC AC 081650
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1150 AM CDT Wed Jul 08 2020
Valid 081630Z - 091200Z
...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS NEBRASKA
AND NORTHERN KANSAS...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MIDWEST/UPPER GREAT LAKES AND NEW ENGLAND...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are likely late this afternoon into tonight
across the Central Plains and Upper Midwest, with other severe
thunderstorms possible across the Northeast this afternoon/early
evening.
...Central Plains...
Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are expected to develop
this afternoon along and ahead of the cold front across northern
Nebraska, and also within the low-level upslope-flow regime across
the central High Plains including southeast Wyoming/Nebraska
Panhandle. Large hail and damaging gusts will be possible.
A weakness in mid-level flow should lead to clustering of convection
rather quickly, though a few initial are possible beneath initially
strong anvil-level winds. With steep low/mid-level lapse rates, peak
MLCAPE values of 2500-3500 J/kg are expected, decreasing gradually
with southward extent and time, in proximity to stronger ridging and
warmer temperatures aloft. With time, a pronounced/well-organized
quasi-linear convective system (QLCS) is expected to aggregate and
organize a cold pool, propelling it southeastward across Nebraska
into Kansas, with potentially widespread severe wind and some hail
likely continuing tonight. This complex of storms may remain well
organized through much of the late-night hours as it spreads
generally southeastward.
...Upper Midwest/Upper Great Lakes...
The remnants of a long-lived MCS continue to slowly weaken across
the western Lake Superior vicinity/northwest Wisconsin at late
morning. The exact impacts and details of recovery in the wake of
this MCS are still a bit uncertain, but outflow across southern
Minnesota should gradually decay/shift northward later today, with
strong destabilization plausible as far north as north-central
Minnesota, aided by a diurnally strong low-level jet/warm advection
preceding a slow-southeastward-moving cold front.
Initial thunderstorm development this afternoon will be most
probable in vicinity of a weak surface wave/nearby warm front
extending across north-central/northeast Minnesota into western
Wisconsin. Pending the details of destabilization,
severe-weather/supercell potential should be maximized within the
corridor with deep-layer/low-level shear also expected to maximize
in these areas. All severe facets may occur including severe hail,
damaging winds, and a tornado risk.
Other more isolated severe thunderstorms should develop near the
cold front as extends southwestward across west-central/southwest
Minnesota into southwest South Dakota within a very unstable/modest
shear environment.
...New England/Northeast States...
The region will be influenced by a low-amplitude mid-level shortwave
trough/speed max. The strongest combination of deep-layer shear
(30-40 kt) and moderate destabilization (possibly 1500-2000 J/kg
MLCAPE) is expected across Vermont/New Hampshire and western Maine
this afternoon, particularly in vicinity of a warm
front/differential heating zone. As surface-based storms
develop/intensify this afternoon, this corridor should yield
sustained multicells and possibly some supercells, with damaging
winds/severe hail potential. Other more episodic severe
thunderstorms, with wind damage as the primary hazard, will be
possible across additional portions of the Northeast/southern New
England.
..Guyer/Squitieri.. 07/08/2020
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