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One thing I see people on social media honing in on is the CAPE. We don’t have that explosive, CAPE bomb environment we usually see in April–June. But, as evidenced by yesterday’s event, I can see a scenario where the cool season trend of CAM’s underestimating parcel updraft strength via CAPE comes into play once again. With really subtle capping, but weak ascent, we could see a situation where it’s a number of supercells across the board. And with the kinematic environment at play (especially after dark), that could spell trouble.
I do think the dryline orientation will play a part. You really want the N/S orientation to have a better shot at storms staying discrete; some models have it that way, some don’t.
The cold front progression will also be something to watch in how quick that progresses. While it is generally warm out east of the synoptic trough, with some subsidence at the surface still lingering from the cold pattern we just got out of, the cold fronts are largely more progressive during the cool season (moving faster).
I do think the dryline orientation will play a part. You really want the N/S orientation to have a better shot at storms staying discrete; some models have it that way, some don’t.
The cold front progression will also be something to watch in how quick that progresses. While it is generally warm out east of the synoptic trough, with some subsidence at the surface still lingering from the cold pattern we just got out of, the cold fronts are largely more progressive during the cool season (moving faster).