Tulsa, OK...Montgomery, AL...Shreveport, LA...Mobile, AL...Little Rock, AR...
2 %
168,455
21,584,009
Dallas, TX...Austin, TX...Memphis, TN...Fort Worth, TX...Oklahoma City, OK...
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
156,541
9,476,840
Birmingham, AL...Montgomery, AL...Shreveport, LA...Mobile, AL...Little Rock, AR...
SPC AC 092134
Day 1 Convective Outlook AMEND 1
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0434 PM CDT Fri Apr 09 2021
Valid 092000Z - 101200Z
...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS A PORTION
OF THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY REGION...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE SOUTHERN
PLAINS INTO THE TENNESSEE VALLEY AND SOUTHEAST STATES...
AMENDED MAINLY TO EXPAND SLGT RISK FARTHER WEST INTO CENTRAL TEXAS
TO ACCOUNT FOR POSSIBILITY OF GIANT HAIL
...SUMMARY...
Multiple episodes of severe thunderstorms with potential for all
hazards are expected today into tonight from parts of eastern
Oklahoma and east Texas across the Mid-South and Mississippi Delta
regions, to parts of Alabama and Georgia. This includes a threat for
a swath of severe wind from Arkansas across the lower Mississippi
Valley. Tornadoes are also are possible, especially this evening and
tonight across the lower Mississippi Valley.
...Lower Mississippi Valley region...
Only a modest adjustment has been made in this area to try and
account for impact of a large area of stabilization from southeast
OK into northeast TX and western AR resulting from an of ongoing
area of thunderstorms. Primary change has been to shift western end
of MDT farther south. It still appears the boundary layer will
destabilize from the southwest as MCS induced outflow boundary/warm
front begins to lifts slowly north. However, the northern extent of
more robust recovery might be limited to some degree, especially
with northward distance into AR. Therefore the more intense portion
of any linear MCS that develops farther northwest across OK may tend
to track a bit farther south.
...Southern MS into southwest AL...
Have expanded the MDT farther southeast into this region to account
for both widespread damaging wind and tornado threat late tonight.
Some potential exists for a few discrete supercells to develop ahead
of the squall line which would increase the threat of significant
tornadoes during the overnight given expected size of low-level
hodographs.
...GA...
Removed severe probabilities from most of this region due to
stabilization in wake of MCV and earlier convection.
..Dial.. 04/09/2021
.PREV DISCUSSION... /ISSUED 1126 AM CDT Fri Apr 09 2021/
...OK to MS/AL through tonight...
A rather complex pattern and convective evolution is expected,
beginning early this afternoon and continuing through Saturday
morning. A lead shortwave trough moving over the Red River Valley
of TX/OK will continue eastward today and will encounter a
moistening/destabilizing environment by early afternoon near the
Ark-La-Tex. Boundary-layer dewpoints in the upper 60s and surface
temperatures warming into the lower 80s, beneath midlevel lapse
rates near 9 C/km, will result in MLCAPE in excess of 3000 J/kg.
Ascent (as evidenced by the midlevel convection now over
north/northeast TX) will help erode the cap noted in 12z soundings,
and surface-based storm development is likely by early afternoon
along the warm front from northeast TX into northwestern LA.
Low-level shear will not be particularly strong through mid
afternoon, but the steep lapse rates/large CAPE and effective bulk
shear in excess of 40 kt will favor a mix of supercells and upscale
cluster growth, with attendant threats for very large hail and
damaging winds as the convection spreads eastward toward the
Ark-La-Miss through the afternoon/evening. The northern extent of
this convection should reach as far north as western TN, and the
storms could pose a damaging-wind threat as far east as northwest AL
before weakening late evening.
There will be some potential for storm development along the warm
front and/or remnant outflow boundary later this afternoon across
northern LA and northeast TX, in the wake of the initial Ark-La-Tex
convection. Gradual increases in low-level flow/shear suggest some
potential for supercells with very large hail, damaging winds, and a
few tornadoes. The evolution of convection this afternoon/evening
across northern LA and vicinity still appears rather
complex/uncertain, and details will not likely be resolved until
this afternoon.
Farther west, additional storm development is likely later this
afternoon into this evening along the north edge of the warm sector
in northeast OK, and along a cold front into central OK. MLCAPE
will increase to 2000-2500 J/kg as surface temperatures warm into
the 70s north to the lower 80s closer to the Red River, with
boundary-layer dewpoints ranging from near 60 north by mid afternoon
to the mid 60s near the Red River. The combination of
moderate-strong buoyancy and sufficient deep-layer shear will
support both organized clusters and some supercells, with fairly
rapid upscale growth into a line expected by this evening along the
cold front. Storms will subsequently surge southeastward from
eastern OK into western/southern AR and northeast TX tonight,
potentially along the outflow-reinforced front in the wake of the
afternoon Ark-La-Tex convection. Large hail and swaths of damaging
winds, some significant, appear likely, as well as the potential for
a few tornadoes with embedded circulations as convection continues
overnight across LA/MS, and potentially into AL before 12z.
...Southern VA/northern NC this afternoon into early tonight...
Around the southeastern periphery of a closed midlevel low over WI,
a subtle embedded speed max will translate east-northeastward from
the southern Appalachians to VA by this evening. Surface heating
and some low-level moistening along a slow-moving front across
southern VA could provide a focus for thunderstorm development later
this afternoon into early tonight. MLCAPE near or above 1500 J/kg
and effective bulk shear of 35-40 kt will favor a mix of organized
clusters and supercells capable of producing large hail and damaging
winds, as well as a brief tornado with slightly stronger low-level
shear along the boundary.
...Central and north TX this afternoon/evening...
Regional 12z soundings showed a very strong cap across TX, with
convective temperatures generally in the mid 90s. Large CAPE is
expected east of the dryline, but there is substantial uncertainty
that surface temperatures will get sufficiently warm to eliminate
convective inhibition. Will maintain a conditional severe risk,
with somewhat higher probabilities in north TX compared to central
TX, given substantial uncertainty regarding convective initiation.
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