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
15 %
173,098
20,812,989
Chicago, IL...Milwaukee, WI...Oklahoma City, OK...Tulsa, OK...Madison, WI...
SPC AC 091654
Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1154 AM CDT Thu Jul 09 2020
Valid 091630Z - 101200Z
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE UPPER
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...SOUTH-CENTRAL PLAINS TO MID-SOUTH...AND THE
CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are possible this afternoon and evening across
the Upper Mississippi Valley, south-central Plains and Mid-South, as
well as the northern and central High Plains.
...Upper Mississippi Valley/Upper Midwest...
A prominent MCV over Iowa will continue to influence strong/severe
thunderstorm development this afternoon, particularly near/south of
an outflow-reinforced boundary that extends east-northeastward
across southeast Minnesota into Wisconsin. Other storms should also
develop south-southeastward this afternoon across eastern Iowa into
northern Illinois near/east of the cold front. Damaging winds should
be the primary concern, but some severe hail is possible, and some
tornado threat may exist as well.
...Ozarks/Mid-South...
The remnants of a long-lived bowing MCS that moved out of the
central Plains persists at late morning across far east-central
Oklahoma/northwest Arkansas. This may continue to pose an isolated
damaging wind threat into the early afternoon, although its exact
disposition is not certain. A destabilizing downstream air mass
across the Mid-South region suggests some concern for a persistent
and semi-organized damaging wind risk this afternoon; however, upper
heights are tending to rise with some mid-level warming in
conjunction with weakening deep-layer winds aside from the MCS
itself. Regardless, isolated damaging thunderstorm winds will at
least be some concern across the region this afternoon.
...South-central Plains including Oklahoma/southern Kansas...
MCS-peripheral outflow is expected to gradually modify/decay and
possibly gradually develop northward through late afternoon/early
evening. Along/south of this outflow, a very unstable environment is
expected particularly across northern Oklahoma and far southern
Kansas. Severe potential is conditional along this boundary, but
least isolated but intense severe thunderstorm develop is plausible
late this afternoon and early evening. Relatively maximized
low-level shear near and north of the residual boundary also may
encourage supercell characteristics, with all severe hazards a
possibility if/where storms do form.
...Central High Plains...
Isolated to widely scattered thunderstorms should form this
afternoon over the High Plains/near the higher terrain, as heating
of relatively high terrain preferentially removes MLCINH. Despite
generally rising heights over the region, the environment will
include steep low/middle-level lapse rates, adequate residual
moisture for convection, and areas of relatively backed/upslope
low-level flow related to the front and MCS-outflow trajectories. A
few supercells are possible, with attendant wind/hail threat atop a
deep/well-mixed subcloud layer. Forecast soundings show modest winds
below about 600 mb, but strong veering of wind direction with
height, contributing to favorable deep shear and elongated, nearly
straight-line hodographs. As such, splitting supercells may occur.
Strong upper/anvil-level flow will aid in ventilation and
cloud-layer shear as well. The moist axis expected to exist by
afternoon, from central Kansas northwestward across southwestern
Nebraska to near the Nebraska/Wyoming line, will support peak MLCAPE
ranging from 1500-2000 J/kg, locally higher. Upscale organization of
some of this activity into a small evening/overnight MCS with
continued wind/hail potential is possible.
...Coastal Mid-Atlantic States...
Regarding a low off the coast of North Carolina, whose development
is being monitored by the National Hurricane Center, it appears that
the inland potential for weak supercells and/or thunderstorm-related
gusty winds will remain low. Even under a scenario of increasing
strength/organization, it is likely that the strongest low-level
winds will remain offshore with limited surface-rooted buoyancy
expected in coastal areas.
..Guyer/Squitieri.. 07/09/2020
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