...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MUCH OF
LOUISIANA...MISSISSIPPI...ALABAMA...AND THE FLORIDA PANHANDLE...
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms capable of tornadoes and extensive wind damage
are possible across parts of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama on
Thursday. Scattered severe storms are also possible as far east as
the Florida Panhandle, and as far north as western Tennessee.
...Synopsis...
An upper trough will amplify as it approaches the lower MS Valley
with mid to upper winds increasing to 60-80 kts. At the surface, a
cold front/outflow composite boundary will extend from eastern TX
into AR in the morning, and will shift east through the period.
Ahead of this early activity will be a deepening surface trough.
Preceding the front and early storms, southwesterly low-level winds
will create a surge of theta-e across LA, MS, and AL during the day,
with mean boundary layer dewpoints increasing to 68-70 F.
Very strong large-scale lift will develop over the lower MS Valley
during the day, with intense deep-layer differential divergence.
Cooling aloft will also accompany the cold front, further aiding
destabilization. The result will be widespread thunderstorms, with
corridors of damaging wind and tornadoes.
....LA...MS...AL...Western FL Panhandle...
Storms are expected to be ongoing Thursday morning along the cold
front/outflow, from southern AR into eastern TX. Some of these
storms could produce strong wind gusts or marginal hail.
Later in the day, a strong surge of deeper low-level moisture will
spread across LA and MS, coincident with 850 mb winds increasing to
over 50 kt. Both instability and shear will increase, and conditions
will become favorable for supercells and tornadoes. Forecast
soundings indicate effective SRH on the order of 300-400 m2/s2
across the entire area. Thus these midday storms may be severe with
a few tornadoes possible should they remain cellular.