• DAY1SVR: Day 1 Convective Outlook Corr 1

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 10 17:58:26 2026
    ACUS01 KWNS 101758
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 101756

    Day 1 Convective Outlook CORR 1
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    1256 PM CDT Wed Jun 10 2026

    Valid 101300Z - 111200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PARTS OF
    THE UPPER/MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS AND MIDWEST...

    CORRECTED FOR INCORRECT CATEGORICAL GRAPHIC

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered to numerous severe thunderstorms with potential for large
    hail in excess of two inches in diameter, a few strong tornadoes and
    damaging winds with gusts over 75 mph are expected this afternoon
    and evening across parts of the Upper Mississippi Valley and
    Midwest.

    ...Mid/Upper MS Valley into the central Plains...
    Regional radar imagery shows an ongoing cluster of strong
    thunderstorms across southern IA and northern MO, supported by a
    residual low-level jet that currently extends from KS/northern OK
    into the region. Heating of the very moist airmass downstream will
    result in limited convective inhibition and strong to very strong
    buoyancy by the early afternoon. Reintensification of the ongoing
    cluster is anticipated as it moves within this destabilizing
    airmass. Deep-layer shear will be modest but still sufficient for
    some organization, and the development of a strong to occasionally
    severe bowing line segment appears probable, particularly from
    northeast IA into southern WI and northern IL. New updrafts ahead of
    the line could also produce hail early in the convective cycle,
    while also potentially contributing to updraft augmentation as they
    merge into the line. Some isolated hail could result from this
    augmentation as well.

    Farther north, recent surface analysis placed a triple point low
    over northeast SD. An occluded front extends north-northwestward
    from this low across eastern ND into central Manitoba, while cold
    front extends southward to another low over northeast NE and then
    back southwestward across the central Plains. The frontal zone and
    triple point low are forecast to progress eastward into the Upper
    Midwest, interacting with a diurnally destabilizing airmass to
    support thunderstorm development. Ample low-level moisture (i.e.
    dewpoints in the upper 60s/low 70s) will support strong buoyancy,
    despite modest lapse rates, and moderate deep-layer vertical shear
    should be sufficient for updraft organization. As a result, strong
    to severe thunderstorms are expected along and just ahead the front,
    with large hail as the primary threat. Isolated very large hail to
    2" in diameter could occur. Some damaging gusts are possible as
    storms transition into bowing line segments over time. There is also
    a low-probability for a few brief tornadoes, particularly with any
    more cellular development from central into eastern WI from 21 to
    00Z.

    An additional severe threat will likely materialize this evening in
    the wake of the afternoon MCS within the recovered airmass from the
    Mid MS Valley westward through the Mid MO Valley into the central
    Plains. The impetus for this redevelopment will likely be a complex
    combination of low-level convergence along the approaching front,
    low-level convergence and warm-air advection along remnant outflow,
    and modest large-scale ascent. Development along the front appears
    most likely from central IA southwestward into northeast KS, while
    development along the outflow appears most likely northwest IL
    across southern IA. The airmass in all of these areas will likely
    feature ample low-level moisture (i.e. dewpoints in the low to mid
    70s), warm surface temperatures (highs in the low 90s), and at least
    modestly steep mid-level lapse rates. This will result in strong to
    extreme buoyancy, with MLCAPE values exceeding 3000 J/kg from
    northeast KS into southern IA, northern MO, and west-central IL.

    Complex surface pattern will likely yield limited predictability for
    the primary severe hazard this evening. Given the extreme buoyancy
    and moderate mid-level flow, any more cellular development that is
    able to mature should become supercellular, with all severe hazards
    possible, including very large hail and tornadoes. Storm interaction
    and strong downdrafts will likely make maintaining a discrete mode
    difficult, but low-level hodographs support the potential for a
    strong tornado, particularly from 00 to 03Z amid a strengthening
    low-level jet.

    Lastly, early morning strong to severe thunderstorms are possible
    across central/eastern NE as a secondary branch of the low-level jet
    develops in response to another shortwave trough moving into the
    central High Plains.

    ...Ohio Valley/Central Appalachians/Mid-Atlantic States...
    A moist and unstable airmass will be in place today across much of
    the region, with surface dewpoints generally in the lower 70s F.
    While some thunderstorms are ongoing early today, additional and
    more potent thunderstorm development is expected into the afternoon
    as the boundary layer destabilizes. These storms will be further
    influenced by a pair of weak eastward-moving MCVs, one over the
    upper Ohio River Valley and the other over the central Appalachians.
    Damaging winds, associated with water-loaded downbursts, will be the
    primary hazard regionally.

    ..Mosier/Flournoy.. 06/10/2026

    $$

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