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Mike Powell | All | DAY2SVR: Nws Storm Predic |
July 21, 2025 8:54 AM * |
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ACUS02 KWNS 210504 SWODY2 SPC AC 210502 Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1202 AM CDT Mon Jul 21 2025 Valid 221200Z - 231200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS TUESDAY INTO TUESDAY NIGHT ACROSS PARTS OF SOUTHEASTERN NORTH DAKOTA...NORTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...MUCH OF CENTRAL MINNESOTA...AND ADJACENT NORTHWESTERN WISCONSIN... ...SUMMARY... Scattered strong thunderstorm development may impact parts of the northern Rockies and Great Plains into Upper Midwest Tuesday into Tuesday night, posing at least some risk for severe weather. ...Discussion... Models continue to indicate that an increasingly prominent mid-level high will evolve across parts of the middle Mississippi/lower Ohio Valley region during this period, within persistent ridging encompassing much of the interior U.S. Modest, anticyclonic flow around the northern periphery of the broader ridging is likely to be maintained across the northern Great Basin through the Dakotas and Upper Midwest, Great Lakes and adjacent portions of Ontario and Quebec. It appears that mid-level ridging will also remain prominent across much of the northeastern Pacific, though it may begin to undergo some suppression. Between the ridging, weak mid-level troughing is likely to linger across the Pacific coast vicinity. As one much more significant short wave trough and embedded cyclone in higher latitudes progress slowly toward the Hudson Bay vicinity, it still appears that one smaller-scale short wave perturbation emerging from the Pacific Northwest may accelerate across and northeast of the mountains of western Montana. However, models now generally indicate that a slightly stronger perturbation may linger to the southwest, across the northern intermountain region. In lower levels, a cold front trailing the higher latitude cyclone is forecast to advance across the international border into the northern Great Plains late Tuesday into Tuesday night. It appears another cold front may make further progress southward though the southern Atlantic coast vicinity, well south of the mid-latitude westerlies. ...Northern Rockies/Great Plains into Upper Midwest... Beneath the warm mid-level ridging, in the wake of a prior frontal passage, seasonably moist boundary layer air is forecast to surge from the middle Missouri Valley and adjacent Great Plains toward the Upper Midwest/adjacent Great Lakes, in advance of the front approaching from the Canadian Prairies. This moisture appears likely to once again contribute to moderate to large potential instability within modestly deep pre-frontal surface troughing, aided by insolation and the presence of generally steep tropospheric lapse rates, though with warm, capping layers aloft. Near the southern periphery of a belt of strengthening southwesterly mid-level flow, it still appears that this environment will become at least conditionally supportive of organized convective development. However, south of the international border, forcing for ascent to support convective development is likely to be mostly tied to subtle perturbations progressing around the northern periphery of the mid-level ridging, which remain uncertain at this time. There does appear a general consensus that stronger boundary-layer heating, within the lee surface troughing, will occur roughly in a narrow corridor from the western South Dakota/Nebraska state border vicinity through northeastern South Dakota/adjacent west central Minnesota by late afternoon, with a zone of strengthening differential heating extending east-southeastward across central Minnesota. It is possible that the boundary intersection could become a focus for isolated late afternoon supercell development, with warm advection along the zone of differential surface heating, aided by a strengthening southerly low-level jet impinging on it, contributing to an upscale growing cluster of storms Tuesday evening. However, due to the warm and capping air aloft, and possible weak upper support for ascent, this remains rather uncertain. With a more substantive short wave perturbation lingering back across the northern intermountain region, models suggest that more substantive destabilization is possible on moistening low-level northeasterly to easterly flow into the higher terrain of south central through southeastern Montana. Aided by the pronounced veering of winds from near surface to mid-levels, it appears that deep-layer shear may become conducive to isolated to widely scattered supercell development late Tuesday afternoon and evening. ...South Carolina into Georgia... Although lapse rates may be modest, high moisture content along/ahead of the slowly southwestward advancing cold front may support the development of modest CAPE and contribute to an environment conducive to convection capable of producing a few strong downbursts. It is also possible that unsaturated layers may be sufficient to contribute to broader cold pools accompanied by potentially damaging winds along the gust fronts. ..Kerr.. 07/21/2025 $$ --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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