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Severe Weather Threat January 8-10, 2026

Can anyone explain why Northern OK would be producing a sounding like this AFTER the initial line of storms moves through? It's presenting like the system is leaving SB CAPE directly in its wake. Does this have something to do with outflow boundaries?

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GFS is showing something similar but in a different area and to a lesser extent.
 
It’s important to keep in mind that dew point is measurement of moisture RELATIVE to temperature. Dew points at or below 60 by itself doesn’t indicate lack of moisture.

A dew point of 13 with a temp of 20 is just as moist as a dew point of 70 over 77.

Models aren’t showing a lack of instability due low moisture, but rather because the vertical temperature profile is rather flat, temps don’t go below freezing until around 650mb, which wouldn’t be a big deal if it wasn’t combined with the mid level inversion layer and it’s no surprise cape doesn’t even break 500j/kg.

This can largely be negated if surface temps are at least in the mid 70s to 80s, this will depend on how cloud free the warm sector is. Obviously, low cape doesn’t thwart tornadoes, but the full potential will definitely be limited if the cumulus field doesn’t evaporate quickly.
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Can anyone explain why Northern OK would be producing a sounding like this AFTER the initial line of storms moves through? It's presenting like the system is leaving SB CAPE directly in its wake. Does this have something to do with outflow boundaries?

View attachment 49672
View attachment 49673View attachment 49674

GFS is showing something similar but in a different area and to a lesser extent.
The dry line is lagging back behind the initial line of storms it initiated, the reason why there’s higher cape is because of the colder air above the surface behind the line of storms.

On the right sounding you can see the dryline is slanted in height (normal), and again, theres higher cape due to the steeper temp profile and slightly warmer surface temps due to WAA being stronger near the dryline.
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Can anyone explain why Northern OK would be producing a sounding like this AFTER the initial line of storms moves through? It's presenting like the system is leaving SB CAPE directly in its wake. Does this have something to do with outflow boundaries?

View attachment 49672
View attachment 49673View attachment 49674

GFS is showing something similar but in a different area and to a lesser extent.
@jiharris0220 already nailed the answer for this, but on your second part:

Outflow boundaries can (and sometimes greatly) enhance shear and also act as a focal point for storm initiation. As you know as well, they can also undercut ongoing convection.

I’m sure there are scenarios where outflow boundaries can focus existing CAPE, but CAPE is always going to be more related to the temperature profile throughout the atmosphere at the vertical.
 
That NAM quirk in S KS/N OK honestly would be a decent early cold core eque event if it were to verify. If that trend maintains, I might start watching that area.

A quick note about CAPE is while low level thermodynamics do matter, it is how it is distributed vertically throughout the atmosphere. There's reasons events like 3/5/2022 worked. You had fairly cold temps for a significant event, but the nice mid level thermodynamics contributed to strong instability above. If it was all focused in the low levels or depended on, then events where storms would need to break a stable layer or inversion, they wouldn't really happen. Strong instability above the stable layer is key in those nocturnal events. 2/26/23, 5/4/07, 5/18/25, 6/20/25. A few events of note where storms had a strong inversion to deal with but rapidly became mature so they sustained due to well mixed mid levels aloft allowing a balance of shear. That's a bit steering from the main question at hand. A profile like that, even if 62/59, would be pretty nice to sustain convection out of
 
Yep. On surface low placement, while it’s very important, if other factors are present, they can compensate for that. Look at 4/2/25 last year with the surface low that far north around Minnesota.

That is something I thought incorrectly about for years, that the surface low needed to be in very close proximity to the outbreak region. As long as there are pressure falls to back the low-level winds ahead of the front, as well as height falls aloft, low location doesn't always matter. If you still have a catalyst to cause pressure falls and large scale ascent aloft, placement isn’t a make or break.

This is different than the situation we are discussing for Friday, but it’s something I learned last year after reading up on the 4/2 event since I would almost write events off if they weren’t in near proximity to the surface low.
Yeah, admittedly i became WXTwitter that whole day and pretty much dismissed even professional offices opinions just because i simply couldn't see a reason why the high risk was warranted. It wasn't really due to the surface low, but more so a reliance on CAMs which o have lessened since then. They're more a guidance or potential depiction, and they do not forecast CFs well. I got proven wrong that day very hard. It's a reason why i try to be straight to the point but trying not to overdo my opinion of certain setups. I, called a pretty obvious bait setup in November in SE MO potential for a strong tornado lol.

Surface low placement does matter but as you said, outbreaks happen in all sort of variability. Always differently combined ingredients but they work to beat a certain factor and overcome it, whereas other times the combination doesn't work and the event underperforms.
 
Supercell printer go brrrrrr
I feel like the RRFS is literally just that one guy on YouTube who calls every storm the "largest he's ever seen" mixed in with a little sprinkle of WXTwitter weenies. Genuinely trying to take that run seriously, I'm very curious WHY the RRFS depicts such a robust supercell in Eastern AR. Seems to be riding some sort of boundary on that run or something at least. It may be a major outlier but always fun to pick apart anyways
 
In all seriousness, though, I do honestly question why the RRFS is always extremely bullish on supercells and helicity tracks. It’s so funny to me that it just always spits out the highest end solution 99% of the time.
It's something to do with its parameter scheme, I'd bet. They can also mean hail tracks but that's a stupidly large UH track LOL. Definitely gives a idea of what maybe more instability up north could do...
 
That NAM quirk in S KS/N OK honestly would be a decent early cold core eque event if it were to verify. If that trend maintains, I might start watching that area.

A quick note about CAPE is while low level thermodynamics do matter, it is how it is distributed vertically throughout the atmosphere. There's reasons events like 3/5/2022 worked. You had fairly cold temps for a significant event, but the nice mid level thermodynamics contributed to strong instability above. If it was all focused in the low levels or depended on, then events where storms would need to break a stable layer or inversion, they wouldn't really happen. Strong instability above the stable layer is key in those nocturnal events. 2/26/23, 5/4/07, 5/18/25, 6/20/25. A few events of note where storms had a strong inversion to deal with but rapidly became mature so they sustained due to well mixed mid levels aloft allowing a balance of shear. That's a bit steering from the main question at hand. A profile like that, even if 62/59, would be pretty nice to sustain convection out of

Totally forgot the 18Z HRRR goes to 18Z Thursday. It's actually more extreme than the Nam in terms of MU cape and (rear flank?) Supercells. Never seen anything like that before.

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It actually has MUCAPE peaking at 1500 J/kg as the first line passes over.

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Very interested in what the 00Z says in a couple hours.
 
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