Aug 30, 2020 1630 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook
Updated: Sun Aug 30 16:29:36 UTC 2020 (20200830 1630Z Day 1 shapefile | 20200830 1630Z Day 1 KML)
Probabilistic to Categorical Outlook Conversion Table
Categorical Graphic
20200830 1630 UTC Day 1 Outlook Graphic
Day 1 Risk Area (sq. mi.) Area Pop. Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
SLIGHT 61,849 1,039,907 Sioux Falls, SD...Grand Island, NE...Kearney, NE...Norfolk, NE...Aberdeen, SD...
MARGINAL 363,049 28,920,386 Dallas, TX...Memphis, TN...Fort Worth, TX...Oklahoma City, OK...Nashville, TN...
Probabilistic Tornado Graphic
20200830 1630 UTC Day 1 Tornado Probabilities Graphic
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
2 % 71,811 2,041,051 Little Rock, AR...Sioux Falls, SD...North Little Rock, AR...Pine Bluff, AR...Conway, AR...
Probabilistic Damaging Wind Graphic
20200830 1630 UTC Day 1 Damaging Wind Probabilities 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
15 % 48,628 961,420 Sioux Falls, SD...Grand Island, NE...Kearney, NE...Norfolk, NE...Hastings, NE...
5 % 373,581 28,894,263 Dallas, TX...Memphis, TN...Fort Worth, TX...Oklahoma City, OK...Nashville, TN...
Probabilistic Large Hail Graphic
20200830 1630 UTC Day 1 Large Hail Probabilities 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
SIG SEVERE 31,157 330,560 Kearney, NE...Aberdeen, SD...Mitchell, SD...Huron, SD...Lexington, NE...
15 % 55,908 953,827 Sioux Falls, SD...Grand Island, NE...Kearney, NE...Norfolk, NE...Aberdeen, SD...
5 % 233,457 14,779,541 Dallas, TX...Fort Worth, TX...Oklahoma City, OK...Arlington, TX...Plano, TX...
   SPC AC 301629

   Day 1 Convective Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   1129 AM CDT Sun Aug 30 2020

   Valid 301630Z - 311200Z

   ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS PARTS OF THE
   NORTH-CENTRAL STATES...

   ...SUMMARY...
   The most likely area for severe thunderstorms capable of very large
   hail, damaging winds, and a tornado or two will be centered on
   eastern South Dakota into central Nebraska, mainly between 4 to 10
   PM CDT.

   ...Eastern Dakotas to northern KS...
   Primary change is to add a significant severe hail area for the most
   likely corridor of supercell initiation between 21-00Z. While
   coverage should remain rather isolated, magnitudes may reach
   baseball size. 

   A shortwave trough over the northern High Plains will progress into
   MN by 12Z Monday. The bulk of strong mid-level west-southwesterlies
   will remain displaced behind a pronounced surface cold front that
   should reach eastern ND to western NE by 21Z. A trough/dryline will
   extend south of this front from south-central SD into northwest KS. 

   A well-defined elevated mixed layer characterized by very steep
   mid-level lapse rates up to 9 C/km was sampled by 12Z area
   soundings. A narrow plume of low to mid 60s surface dew points are
   being advected north beneath the EML and will yield a corridor of
   moderately large MLCAPE from 2000-3000 J/kg, the northern extent of
   which should reach the ABR/HON vicinity. Convective initiation is
   expected around 21Z along the surface trough/dryline as MLCIN
   subsides with a low-level thermal ridge between the dryline and cold
   front. A veering wind profile with height will support 30-40 kt
   effective shear, supportive of at least a few supercells from
   eastern SD into central NE. Initial development will have the
   greatest opportunity to produce very large hail. But weakness in the
   mid to upper portion of the hodograph suggests a tendency for some
   clustering to occur during the evening. Clusters that attempt to
   spread east will encounter a more stable environment east of the
   relatively narrow buoyancy plume suggesting an abrupt demise of the
   severe threat into western MN/IA. Convection should linger longest
   tonight across southern NE into northern KS with an isolated severe
   wind/hail threat.

   ...Southern Great Plains to the TN Valley...
   A pair of MCVs from remnants of MCSs last night into this morning
   were located near southwest KY and west-central AR. These features
   should aid in scattered thunderstorms later this afternoon, mainly
   east of the MS river into the TN Valley. The overall environment in
   this area will be moderately unstable and modestly sheared,
   supporting a few multicell clusters capable of locally damaging
   winds.

   Farther west, isolated thunderstorms are expected near the juncture
   of the dryline and diffuse quasi-stationary front in the central to
   eastern TX Panhandle, with activity spreading east along the Red
   River this evening. An overall modest combination of deep-layer
   shear and mid/upper-level lapse rates should favor an isolated
   severe hail/wind risk. 

   A separate zone of low-level warm advection forced convection should
   develop overnight across AR. Rich tropical boundary-layer moisture
   returning north may compensate for weak nocturnal MLCIN and support
   surface-based effective inflow parcels. An enlarged low-level
   hodograph could foster a low probability risk for all hazards
   centered on central AR.

   ..Grams/Bentley.. 08/30/2020

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