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February 23 Ohio Valley Severe Threat


Hoosier

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This doesn't look like a big deal right now.

day2probotlk_20120222_1730_any_prt.gif

DAY 2 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK

NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK

1129 AM CST WED FEB 22 2012

VALID 231200Z - 241200Z

...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS LATE THURSDAY/THURSDAY NIGHT

ACROSS PARTS OF THE LOWER OHIO AND TENNESSEE VALLEYS INTO THE GULF

STATES...

...SYNOPSIS...

MODELS MAY BE COMING IN BETTER AGREEMENT CONCERNING A STRONG

MID-LEVEL JET STREAK NOW DIGGING INLAND ACROSS THE PACIFIC

NORTHWEST...AND ITS INFLUENCE ON A CLOSED LOW CURRENTLY CUT-OFF FROM

THE STRONGER WESTERLIES...NEAR THE BAJA SPUR. IT NOW APPEARS MOST

PROBABLE THAT AN INITIAL SHORT WAVE TROUGH WILL TURN EAST SOUTHEAST

OF THE NORTHERN ROCKIES BY 12Z THURSDAY...AND CONTRIBUTE TO STRONG

SURFACE CYCLOGENESIS EAST OF THE MIDDLE MISSOURI VALLEY THROUGH THE

LOWER GREAT LAKES REGION BY 12Z FRIDAY...AS AN UPSTREAM IMPULSE DIGS

THROUGH THE CENTRAL ROCKIES. IT IS THIS LATTER FEATURE THAT MIGHT

FINALLY CONTRIBUTE TO A MORE RAPID EASTWARD ACCELERATION OF THE BAJA

LOW...BUT THE LOW STILL MIGHT NOT PROGRESS EAST OF THE GULF OF

CALIFORNIA INTO THE MEXICAN PLATEAU UNTIL LATE IN THE PERIOD.

DESPITE SOME GREATER CERTAINTY CONCERNING THE PATTERN EVOLUTION

...THE SEVERE POTENTIAL FOR THURSDAY REMAINS RATHER UNCERTAIN. THE

MOISTENING BOUNDARY LAYER OVER THE GULF OF MEXICO /WITH UPPER

60S...LOWER 70S SURFACE DEW POINTS/ CONTINUES TO DEEPEN...BUT

LOW-LEVEL FLOW ACROSS MUCH OF THE SOUTH CENTRAL AND SOUTHEAST HAS

DEVELOPED A SIGNIFICANT WESTERLY COMPONENT...AND LITTLE SIGNIFICANT

BACKING IS EXPECTED TO OCCUR THROUGH THIS PERIOD. A GRADUAL

NORTHWARD RETURN OF MID 50S TO NEAR 60S SURFACE DEW POINTS...NOW

PRESENT ACROSS EAST TEXAS INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...MAY

OCCUR...BUT GENERALLY NOT BEFORE CAPPING ELEVATED MIXED LAYERS

OVERSPREAD WHAT WILL BECOME THE WARM SECTOR OF THE DEVELOPING

CYCLONE. WITH THE PRIMARY MID-LEVEL COLD CORE AND FORCING FOR

UPWARD VERTICAL MOTION EXPECTED TO REMAIN DISPLACED TO THE NORTHWEST

OF THE WARM SECTOR...WEAK CAPE AND THE LACK OF STRONGER DEEP LAYER

LIFT SEEM LIKELY TO SUBSTANTIALLY REDUCE THE OVERALL SEVERE STORM

POTENTIAL FROM WHAT IT COULD BE IF A POTENTIALLY UNSTABLE AIR MASS

WAS ALREADY PRESENT OVER THE MID SOUTH AND GULF STATES. STILL...THE

PRESENCE OF A SHEARED AND STRONG DEEP LAYER MEAN FLOW FIELD...AREAS

WITH RATHER LARGE CLOCKWISE CURVED LOW-LEVEL HODOGRAPHS...AND

POCKETS OF AT LEAST WEAK DESTABILIZATION SHOULD BE CONDUCIVE TO SOME

STRONG/SEVERE STORM DEVELOPMENT.

...LOWER OH/TN VALLEYS INTO GULF STATES...

THE INITIATION OF VIGOROUS STORM DEVELOPMENT CURRENTLY SEEMS MOST

PROBABLE LATE THURSDAY AFTERNOON...FROM THE NORTHEAST

ARKANSAS/MISSOURI BOOTHEEL/WESTERN TENNESSEE REGION INTO THE LOWER

OHIO VALLEY. WITHIN AN AXIS OF STRONGER WARM SECTOR/PRE-COLD

FRONTAL HEATING...MIXED LAYER CAPE ON THE ORDER OF 500 J/KG APPEARS

POSSIBLE...AS LIFT INCREASES ON THE SOUTHERN FRINGE OF STRONGER

MID-LEVEL FORCING. AIDED BY INCREASING FRONTAL FORCING BENEATH

STRONGLY DIFLUENT HIGH LEVEL FLOW...UPSCALE CONVECTIVE GROWTH INTO A

SQUALL LINE IS POSSIBLE...AS CONVECTION ADVANCES SOUTHEASTWARD

TOWARD THE CENTRAL/SOUTHERN APPALACHIANS AND UPPER TENNESSEE VALLEY

THROUGH THURSDAY NIGHT. ISOLATED SUPERCELLS MAY NOT BE OUT OF THE

QUESTION WITHIN AND JUST AHEAD OF THE LINE...ACCOMPANIED BY

POTENTIAL FOR LARGE HAIL AND TORNADOES...IN ADDITION TO THE RISK FOR

STRONG DAMAGING WIND GUSTS. ADDITIONAL STRONG/SEVERE STORM

DEVELOPMENT IS POSSIBLE ALONG THE FRONT AS IT ADVANCES SOUTHWARD

INTO THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND UPPER TEXAS COASTAL

AREAS...PERHAPS DEEP SOUTH TEXAS...THURSDAY NIGHT.

..KERR.. 02/22/2012

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5% tor probs into southern IN/southwest OH

day1probotlk_20120223_1200_torn_prt.gif

DAY 1 CONVECTIVE OUTLOOK

NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK

1154 PM CST WED FEB 22 2012

VALID 231200Z - 241200Z

...THERE IS A SLGT RISK OF SVR TSTMS FOR PARTS OF THE OH/TN VALLEYS

AND DEEP SOUTH...

...SYNOPSIS...

INTENSE MID-LEVEL JET FROM THE PACIFIC NW TO THE CNTRL ROCKIES WILL

PROGRESS EWD ON THU...AIDING IN AMPLIFICATION OF A SHORT WAVE

IMPULSE CURRENTLY OVER THE NRN HIGH PLAINS. THIS FEATURE SHOULD

REACH THE LOWER/MID-MO VALLEY BY EVENING AND REMAIN

POSITIVELY-TILTED AS IT EJECTS ACROSS THE MIDWEST TOWARDS THE LOWER

GREAT LAKES THROUGH FRI MORNING. PRIMARY SURFACE CYCLONE IS EXPECTED

TO BE INVOF IL/IND BORDER BY 00Z...WITH A W/E-ORIENTED WARM FRONT

SHIFTING NWD ACROSS THE OH VALLEY. THIS LOW SHOULD TRACK TOWARDS LK

ERIE...WHILE AN ATTENDANT COLD FRONT SWEEPS E/SEWD ACROSS THE MS/TN

VALLEYS AND WRN GULF COAST IN THE EVENING...BEFORE REACHING THE

CNTRL/SRN APPALACHIANS AND CNTRL GULF COAST BY 12Z/FRI.

...OH/TN VALLEYS TO THE CNTRL GULF COAST...

IN THE WAKE OF THE SHORT WAVE IMPULSE CURRENTLY OVER THE CNTRL/SRN

APPALACHIANS...STRONG LOW/MID-LEVEL WLYS HAVE ENVELOPED THE RESIDUAL

WARM SECTOR FROM THE TN VALLEY TO THE CNTRL GULF COAST. ALTHOUGH

MODEST BACKING TO SWLY LOW-LEVEL FLOW IS EXPECTED AS THE N-CNTRL

CONUS SHORT WAVE TROUGH AMPLIFIES...THIS TYPE OF REGIME SHOULD SERVE

TO LIMIT THE VERTICAL EXTENT OF RICHER GULF MOISTURE BENEATH AN

EXPANDING EML.

EVENING MODEL GUIDANCE VARY MARKEDLY WITH THEIR HANDLING OF THE

MOISTURE RETURN TOWARDS THE LOWER OH VALLEY. THE NAM AND

WRF-NMM/ETA-BASED MEMBERS OF THE SREF ARE MORE AGGRESSIVE THAN THE

GFS/ECMWF AND WRF-ARW/RSM MEMBERS OF THE SREF...WHICH RESULTS IN

SUBSTANTIAL DIFFERENCES IN BUOYANCY PROFILES.

NEVERTHELESS...VIGOROUS LARGE-SCALE ASCENT COUPLED WITH DAYTIME

HEATING SHOULD YIELD TSTM INITIATION INVOF SURFACE CYCLONE NEAR THE

LOWER OH VALLEY BY LATE AFTERNOON. HERE...VERY STRONG DEEP-LAYER

SHEAR AND AT LEAST MEAGER INSTABILITY WOULD PROMOTE A RISK FOR

ORGANIZED TSTM CLUSTERS AND EMBEDDED SUPERCELLS. BUT GIVEN THE

UNCERTAINTY IN THE QUALITY OF THE BOUNDARY LAYER MOISTURE...WILL

REFRAIN FROM INTRODUCING HIGHER SEVERE PROBABILITIES ATTM.

WITH SRN EXTENT...CONFIDENCE LESSENS ON TSTM INITIATION AS STRONGER

LARGE-SCALE ASCENT LARGELY REMAINS N OF THE OH VALLEY. BUT

CONVERGENCE ALONG THE COLD FRONT ALONG WITH WEAK MID-LEVEL HEIGHT

FALLS MAY RESULT IN TSTMS FORMING SWD ACROSS THE TN VALLEY INTO THE

DEEP SOUTH DURING THE EVENING. EVEN WITH ONLY WEAK

INSTABILITY...DEEP-LAYER SHEAR WILL BE QUITE FAVORABLE FOR ISOLATED

SUPERCELLS WITH ALL SEVERE THREATS POSSIBLE.

TOWARDS THE CNTRL GULF COAST...GUIDANCE IS LARGELY CONSISTENT IN

MAINTAINING AN EML THROUGH MOST OF THE PERIOD. SOME POTENTIAL FOR

TSTM DEVELOPMENT SHOULD EXIST OVERNIGHT ALONG THE COLD FRONT. BUT

MODEST INSTABILITY AND VEERING/WEAKENING LOW-LEVEL WINDS SHOULD

RESULT IN A MORE MARGINAL SEVERE RISK RELATIVE TO FARTHER N.

..GRAMS/LEITMAN.. 02/23/2012

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Digging further into this setup, I'd go so far to say that a strong tornado can't be ruled out especially if the NAM instability happens. A lot of setups in this part of the country tend to have mainly unidirectional flow above 850 mb, but notice how there is decent turning above that level on this forecast sounding. This sounding exhibits very nice strengthening/veering winds with height.

Watch the temp/moisture trends closely tomorrow.

post-14-0-18936200-1329980647.gif

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Digging further into this setup, I'd go so far to say that a strong tornado can't be ruled out especially if the NAM instability happens. A lot of setups in this part of the country tend to have mainly unidirectional flow above 850 mb, but notice how there is decent turning above that level on this forecast sounding. This sounding exhibits very nice strengthening/veering winds with height.

Watch the temp/moisture trends closely tomorrow.

post-14-0-18936200-1329980647.gif

I would completely agree. The issues with moisture that will plague the SE will have a hard time plaguing the OH Valley because of moisture pooling south of the boundary. Currently, the EMC WRF, WRF-NMM, and WRF-ARW all target the OH Valley pretty darn hard tomorrow, and with the kind of low-level instability and shear that should be there, I think this is a legitimate threat.

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992 mb SLP (probably lower at the CoC) per current mesoanalysis:

LL shear is going to skyrocket as this thing approaches. 06z NAM has initialized, rather eager to see what it projects.

Edit: 0-3 km EHI values of 3-5 across portions of KY and Northern Middle TN by 21z per the 06z NAM.

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Very sharp theta-e boundary depicted on the NAM in the latest runs, and compares pretty favorably to the GFS too. There will be some serious horizontal vorticity available along this feature.

That's the area I'm going to target. I'm going to start east of Louisville and adjust as necessary.

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Not liking the fact that the storms may initiate further west, may have trouble rooting in the boundary layer before sunset and may congeal into a squall line plus moisture return issues. Those are more than enough questions for me to call off the chase before it starts and save the money I would've spent on gas.

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Back down to a 5% tornado risk.

Yeah, when I saw the graphics my first thought was moisture return. Lower 50s instead of middle.

Not liking the fact that the storms may initiate further west, may have trouble rooting in the boundary layer before sunset and may congeal into a squall line plus moisture return issues. Those are more than enough questions for me to call off the chase before it starts and save the money I would've spent on gas.

I don't think the eventual squall line was ever really in doubt. It was the initial storms that posed a larger threat. Even so, there will be a strong boundary present, and squall line spins ups will be possible.

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Yeah, when I saw the graphics my first thought was moisture return. Lower 50s instead of middle.

I don't think the eventual squall line was ever really in doubt. It was the initial storms that posed a larger threat. Even so, there will be a strong boundary present, and squall line spins ups will be possible.

With the helicity in place and the boundary present, spin ups will definitely be likely. It'll be interesting to watch the warning philosophy play out this afternoon as Louisville tends to tornado warn the whole line in these situations and Wilmington tends to try to warn based on individual couplets within the QLCS.

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The sun has been out for the past 90+ minutes and temperatures are skyrocketing here in Louisville. One thing that I think the SPC might be underestimating wrt moisture is that the storms from last night/this morning left quite a bit of ground moisture here which the sun should now evaporate at an accelerated pace.

I don't know if I completely agree with the removal of the 10% chance since not a lot has changed since it was originally issued.

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thea.gif?1330022481187

Strongest theta-e advection taking place in the Ohio Valley area. Also a ribbon of higher theta-e air is starting to make its way up the Mississippi Valley. It's going to be a tight race.

It will be close but I think the moisture advection is winning so far. Especially with dews in the mid 50s in W KY/TN

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