• DAY1 3/5 RISK AREA POSTED

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Wednesday, May 06, 2026 08:37:08
    ACUS01 KWNS 061243
    SWODY1
    SPC AC 061242

    Day 1 Convective Outlook
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0742 AM CDT Wed May 06 2026

    Valid 061300Z - 071200Z

    ...THERE IS AN ENHANCED RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS
    OF NORTHERN LOUISIANA...CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI...AND CENTRAL ALABAMA...

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE WESTERN
    TEXAS HILL COUNTRY...

    ...SUMMARY...
    Scattered severe thunderstorms are expected this afternoon and
    evening from eastern Texas into the lower Mississippi and Tennessee Valleys/southern Appalachians. Supercells capable of all hazards
    will be possible across portions of central Mississippi and Alabama
    before a shift to a more of a damaging wind risk into the late evening/overnight.

    ...Synopsis...
    Early-morning satellite imagery shows a pair of phased shortwave
    troughs, one in the northern stream moving southward into UT/CO and
    the other in southern stream off the southern CA/northern Baja
    coast. Strong, confluent flow aloft exists downstream of these
    shortwaves, with an extensive fetch of moderate to strong
    southwesterly flow extending from northern Mexico into the
    Northeast. A general deepening of the upper troughing is anticipated
    throughout the day as the northern-stream shortwave continues
    southeastward while the southern-stream shortwave moves gradually
    eastward. This evolution will result in strengthening mid to upper
    level flow from the southern Plain into New England, particularly
    from the Lower MO Valley through the OH Valley where 500 mb flow
    could exceed 100 kt. This evolution will also push a cold front,
    which currently extends from the TX Hill Country into western PA,
    farther south.

    There will be some displacement between the strongest flow aloft and
    the more warm and moist conditions south of the front. However,
    even with this displacement, moderate to strong upper/mid flow is
    still expected across much of the southern Plains and Southeast.
    Strong to severe thunderstorms are still expected along and ahead of
    this cold front from the TX Hill Country through the Southeast and
    into the Carolinas. Highest coverage of severe thunderstorms will be
    from central MS into central AL, where supercells capable of all
    hazards will be possible.

    ...East TX/Lower MS Valley into the Southeast...

    Recent surface analysis placed the cold front from near JCT in the
    TX Hill Country northeastward through the Arklatex, northern MS, and
    western TN. A weak low exists along this boundary over the western
    AR/LA vicinity. 70s dewpoints extend from south TX across LA into
    far western MS and southern AR, with upper 60s dewpoints through
    much of MS. Low-level moisture advection is expected to continue
    throughout the day, with mid 70s dewpoints possible from central LA
    into central MS by the afternoon. This increasing moisture amid
    filtered daytime heating will result in strong buoyancy ahead of the
    front (i.e. 2500 J/kg of MLCAPE), despite poor mid-level lapse
    rates. Also, as mentioned in the synopsis, strong deep-layer shear
    will be in place, resulting in an overall airmass that supports supercells.

    However, whether discrete supercells can develop and mature remains
    uncertain. A combination of neutral height tendencies, widespread
    cloud cover, and warm-air advection initiated storms will likely
    lead to complex convective evolution and related storm interactions.
    Majority of the convection-allowing guidance develops
    thunderstorms within the warm sector from northern LA into central
    MS by 18Z. Thunderstorm development is possible along the front from
    northern AL into northern LA around this time as well. Large to very
    large hail will be the primary risk with these storms, although
    there is also a risk for tornadoes if a storm can remain discrete.
    The tornado risk is expected to increase from the late afternoon
    through the evening from central MS into central AL as low-level
    hodographs lengthen in response to strengthening low-level flow.
    Environmental conditions support the potential for a strong tornado
    during this timeframe. Whether or not storms can realize this
    increasing low-level shear will largely be a function of storm mode.
    Storms should eventually begin to cluster and to grow upscale, with
    an increasing damaging wind threat continuing downstream into
    portions of southern Alabama and central/southern Georgia.

    The front will continue slowly southward, and the very moist
    environment could support additional warm sector storms throughout
    much of the evening and overnight, supporting a continued risk for
    all severe hazards. Several rounds of elevated storms are possible
    as well, with hail as the primary risk with these storms.

    ...TX Hill Country into southeast TX...

    A pair of supercells capable of large hail are currently ongoing
    across southwest TX (Crockett and Sutton Counties). Environmental
    conditions are favorable for storm maintenance for at least an hour
    or two before northward displacement from the better buoyancy leads
    to weakening. Additional isolated development is possible farther
    east into central and southeast TX during the afternoon and evening.
    Any storms that mature would likely be supercellular and capable of
    producing severe hail and damaging wind gusts.

    ..Mosier/Dean.. 05/06/2026

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
    * Origin: Capitol City Online (21:1/175)