Yeah, the convection at the last frame entering NW AL just screams spin-ups.18z Euro View attachment 34293
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Yeah, the convection at the last frame entering NW AL just screams spin-ups.18z Euro View attachment 34293
Yeah it can rip the storms apart actually12z nam has a rather robust paramter space over the ark/la/miss region.
3km SRH helicity at a whoppin 900 in East Lousianna with 1km at 500. Hodgraphs are massive. I don't really know the answer to this question but isn't there such a thing as too much shear?
Tuesday: In response to Tuesday`s wave, a large low level jet will
overspread the area, accelerating Gulf moisture northward. While
there is some lingering dry air to the east of I-55, west of I-55
sees favorable trajectories from the south and higher dewpoints as a
result with dewpoints in the mid 60s. The aforementioned LLJ will
result in strong low level wind shear, with shear vectors out of the
SW around 50kts. This is more than ample for organized storms. The
strong wind fields result in large curved hodographs, favorable for
tornadoes. At this time, there is still a bit of uncertainty with
some failure modes. The primary limiting factor appears to be mode
with moisture tending to hug near the surface cold front and QLCS
mode favored. The pinched off warm sector could suppress discrete
supercell development ahead of the line. Should supercells develop,
they certainly would have a very favorable environment to tap into
to produce all hazards. Given the severe weather potential, there
has been an enhanced risk highlighted for areas west of I-55 with a
slight risk highlighted east. We continue to make adjustments as the
forecast evolves, so continue to check back for latest updates
We will focus more on the start of the new week coming. Monday,
skies will begin to fill with clouds once again as the old frontal
boundary over the gulf will kick back as a warm front and showers
form from moisture loading ahead of the next cold front. A weak sfc
low will follow the thermal boundary and decay as it moves east
Monday. There will be a few showers around Monday but not enough to
give more than a 10% chance of any one location getting wet. A very
strong upper trough will begin to dig southward Tue and this will
ignite a sfc low and frontal boundary with a line of strong/severe
storms all along it over central TX. This will evolve rapidly and
move east even faster. As we were discussing yesterday, timing is
the biggest issue with this system and models today did not
dissapoint in that arena. Models have sped this system up by 8 to 10
hours meaning it would come through much sooner than previously
thought. Timing continues to be the headache with this. This is the
only field that we have an issue with. All others carry high
confidence with them such as the speed of the line of storms being
25-30kt, a squall line of storms with severe potential weakening
southward along the line, and no flooding issues expected more than
ponding of the usual locations. The system will move fast enough to
be in and out relatively quick. Current timing brings the line of
storms into the CWA around or just after noon Tue, and yes this is a
lot different than midnight as it would put the line moving through
Baton Rouge during the early afternoon, New Orleans around sunset
and Pascagoula just after dark. Again, we will need to see this
remain for a few model runs and actually agree with most ensemble
members and other models before we can have a higher confidence
level with the timing. And this is yet another reason why one can`t
just pick any one model but instead look at all data, no matter how
crazy it may seem, to see how well it is initializing. The soonest
time that confidence will build in this system`s timing will be the
Sunday 12z model run. This is when the energy supporting this
feature will be sampled with the upper air network on the west coast
around southern Cali. We will continue to work on the timing since
this is the only real issue that continue to give the lowest
confidence levels at the moment. The other issue with this will be
winds ahead of the front. Confidence is very high with this too.
Southerly winds will be quite breezy Tue once the sun comes up and
mixing is acheived. Sustained winds could be 20-25mph with gusts 30-
35mph. We may issue a wind advisory for Tue since this is Mardi Gras
day and the height of the public being outdoors. These winds could
be an issue for some higher profiled "floats" that catch these winds
broad sided. These issues are especially heightened along streets of
cities between high rises due to the venturi effect causing winds to
speed up more than the average. High pressure will settle over the
area for the end of next week.
Yeah. I’m about ready search for the next one lolEuro downtrending for Tuesday, less instability.
Too early to go to the chopping block. If anything it'll still be a nasty high shear/low cape QLCS with spins ups for a some of our board members.Yeah. I’m about ready search for the next one lol
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Needs to be colder aloft, unlike the 12z Euro, and more like the 12z GFS and NAM, to maximize potential here. The Euro's temperature aloft are pretty inhibitive of more substantial destabilization and some of it is due to too much convection.