tennessee storm chaser
Member
Update coming any minute .Ah okay. Good to know. I wasn’t sure if it was the updated one yet.
Update coming any minute .Ah okay. Good to know. I wasn’t sure if it was the updated one yet.
I think sometime today we might see it upgraded to 30%.Update coming any minute .
The threat is still significant. SPC doesn’t just hand out huge Day 5 outlooks. The model consistency is all over the place. You need to look at general pattern recognition rather than model by model at this point in time. What we really know is there will be plenty of instability pushing rather far north and sufficient wind shear that could lead to big issues. What we don’t know is the trajectory of the low/placement and other mitigating factors that really won’t come into focus until we have the CAM models. Even then if there is an appreciable tornado threat we won’t really know until the morning of the event.The SPC wording seems more nonchalant than I expected. May just be the lack of certainty but the threat level does not seem to be as significant even as yesterdays Day 5 outlook.
We're also kindve in the funky transition period from Globals to Cams. GFS doesn't look all that impressive, but a shift back in the other direction could happen anytime. The event on the 15th, went through this funky phase from what I remember where it didn't look as impressive as what it was and then came back to being super impressive within like 24-36 hours. Just my 2 cents. It'll be fun to watch model trendsThe threat is still significant. SPC doesn’t just hand out huge Day 5 outlooks. The model consistency is all over the place. You need to look at general pattern recognition rather than model by model at this point in time. What we really know is there will be plenty of instability pushing rather far north and sufficient wind shear that could lead to big issues. What we don’t know is the trajectory of the low/placement and other mitigating factors that really won’t come into focus until we have the CAM models. Even then if there is an appreciable tornado threat we won’t really know until the morning of the event.
Regardless of what does happen, the confidence is there for a pretty widespread severe weather event.We're also kindve in the funky transition period from Globals to Cams. GFS doesn't look all that impressive, but a shift back in the other direction could happen anytime. The event on the 15th, went through this funky phase from what I remember where it didn't look as impressive as what it was and then came back to being super impressive within like 24-36 hours. Just my 2 cents. It'll be fun to watch model trends
4-8 day outlooks are released once a day with no updates that I’m aware of.I think sometime today we might see it upgraded to 30%.
Fascinating writeup! Always enjoy reading your analysis from using your weather model.I ran my WRF-ARW model yesterday, but life got in the way, and I wasn't able to run analysis on it and post the results. Here it is for anyone interested. This initialized at 12z *yesterday* and is at 9 km resolution.
First up is the Composite Radar. I snapped an image of it in the evening hours on Sunday. The general idea is pockets of cells initiate overnight in MS and TN and propagate eastward.
View attachment 37341
A stout 2k-3k SBCAPE permeates the area, which gives the storms fuel to thrive.
View attachment 37343
As somewhat of a new metric, this is the Vertically Integrated Graupel. Graupel in convective storms is highly associated with storm cores, lightning, and hail. We see here it highlights a line of discrete storm cores going through MS into TN.
View attachment 37345
Below is a new metric I'm calling the Storm Mode Index, which is essentially an extension of the Bulk Richardson Number to account for helicity and a few other metrics. I've also overlaid the hodographs on top of this plot. You see in the open warm sector, it largely favors discrete (potentially tornado-producing) supercells with curved hodographs, and a multicellular/linear threat along the front itself.
View attachment 37346
I plan to do another run today and see what the new data say. From looking at the GFS, Euro, and ensembles (in addition to this), I feel it's possible the threats may not be widespread but rather scattered, but where they do form, they could be problematic.