ACUS01 KWNS 011652 SWODY1 SPC AC 011650 Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1150 AM CDT Sat Jun 01 2024 Valid 011630Z - 021200Z ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SOUTHWEST KANSAS INTO THE TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA PANHANDLES AND NORTHWEST OKLAHOMA... ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FOR THE CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS AND PORTIONS OF THE MIDDLE AND UPPER TEXAS COAST INTO SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe storms, including a few supercells, are expected to develop across the central and southern High Plains region, including portions of the Big Bend of Texas, this afternoon. This activity should evolve into organized clusters while spreading into the adjacent Great Plains later in the evening. Severe wind, hail, and perhaps a couple of brief tornadoes are the expected risks. ...Central and southern High Plains through tonight... Morning surface analysis places a surface front draped across NE, with weak lee troughing farther to the south across eastern CO/NM in response to modest westerly midlevel flow. Residual outflow boundary intersects the lee trough/dryline over western NE. Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form by mid afternoon along the surface boundaries and immediately east of the higher terrain, and then move eastward/southeastward onto the Plains through tonight. A few supercells may also form across eastern CO into western NE, where large hail up to 2-2.5 inches in diameter will be possible. Recent model guidance has shown stronger agreement in showing scattered thunderstorms developing from southeast CO into western KS late this afternoon into the evening. Upscale growth into an MCS is progged by model guidance within an environment characterized as moderately unstable and featuring steep low to mid-level lapse rates, and moderately strong deep flow supporting organized storms. An intensification of low-level southerly flow during the evening will promote additional storms/mergers into a severe cluster moving east-southeast into parts of the TX Panhandle/northwest OK during the evening. Large hail will be possible with the initial storms, but the threat should evolve more to severe outflow winds of 60-80 mph with the upscale growth. Farther south, the environment across southwest TX will favor splitting supercells immediately east of the mountains, where long/straight hodographs (with effective bulk shear 40-50 kt), steep midlevel lapse rates and MLCAPE near 3000 J/kg will support very large hail of baseball size (2.75 inches) or larger. Isolated severe outflow gusts will also be possible. ...South central/southeast TX into southwest LA this afternoon... Scattered thunderstorm development is expected this afternoon along a stalled front extending from south central TX into southwest LA. The boundary layer continues to destabilize (strong buoyancy as of midday) with moderately strong westerly flow above 500 mb. A mix of multicell clusters and, perhaps, some weak supercell structures will be possible, with the potential to produce isolated large hail and wind damage. ...MS/AL/TN area today... A midlevel trough over the middle and lower MS Valley will move slowly eastward to the TN/OH Valleys through tonight. A couple of different storm clusters will be possible this afternoon near and just east of the midlevel trough within the surface warm sector across MS/AL/TN. Deep-layer vertical shear is relatively weak per regional VWPs, but there is some low-level hodograph curvature within a warm advection regime. Given weak-moderate buoyancy where boundary-layer dewpoints are in the upper 60s or greater, and later pockets of surface heating in cloud breaks, a few storm clusters may include embedded, weakly rotating storms capable of producing a brief tornado or two, along with isolated wind damage. ...Northern UT... Isolated to widely scattered high-based convection is forecast to develop this afternoon. Ample mid- to high-level flow will aid in some organization. The very steep lapse rates (inverted-v profiles) will favor evaporative cooling with the stronger cores and the potential for isolated severe gusts. ..Smith/Weinman.. 06/01/2024 $$