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May 20, 2019 High Risk for Severe Weather, including Tornadoes across TX/OK

I'm watching the threat for severe weather today across Oklahoma and much of Northwest Texas and it has the potential to be historic. A tornado outbreak is being forecast, which is not something you usually see from the National Weather Service. The Storm Prediction Center seems to be all in. Persons living in the Oklahoma City area and locations within the risk area should pay close attention to the weather throughout the day and have a plan of action in place. I'd expect storms to develop and quickly become severe from 2PM onward with the greatest threat for tornadoes materializing from 4-9pm CDT.

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Tornado Threat:
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SPC AC 201255

Day 1 Convective Outlook
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0755 AM CDT Mon May 20 2019

Valid 201300Z - 211200Z

...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF
NORTHWEST TEXAS AND THE EASTERN TEXAS PANHANDLE TO WESTERN AND
CENTRAL OKLAHOMA...

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF
EASTERN NEW YORK AND NEW ENGLAND...

...SUMMARY...
An outbreak of tornadoes, some potentially long-track and violent,
is expected today into this evening over portions of northwest Texas
into western and central Oklahoma. More-isolated but still
potentially dangerous severe weather, including tornadoes and
destructive winds and hail, is possible in surrounding parts of

Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Arkansas.

--- Technical Discussion ---

...Synopsis...
Two primary features will serve as the main mid/upper-level
influences on convective potential through the period:
1. A synoptic cyclone -- centered initially over NV and embedded
within a persistent western CONUS longwave trough. The associated
500-mb low is forecast to pivot southeastward across the Grand
Canyon region today and the southern Rockies overnight, while the
associated trough at that level evolves from positively to
negatively tilted. This will occur as an upstream, northeastern
Pacific low moves southeastward to western OR. The Southwestern
synoptic wave will yield kinematic fields rarely seen in mid/late
May at their latitudes, for example (by 12Z): 120-130-kt 250-mb jet
max over the TX South Plains/Panhandle region, 90-100-kt 500-mb flow
over northwest TX and western OK, 70-80-kt 700-mb winds over or near
eastern OK, and an evening LLJ potentially exceeding 75 kt across
parts of north TX and OK.
2. A shortwave trough -- now apparent in moisture-channel imagery
over portions of Lower MI and Lake Huron. This feature -- embedded
within the southern belt of cyclonic flow around a more-substantial
perturbation over the James Bay region -- will eject east-
northeastward toward the lower St. Lawrence Valley and Maine through
00Z.

At the surface, 11Z analysis showed a diffuse low over southeast NM
near ROW, with warm front eastward across the DFW Metroplex to
northern LA. A dryline was drawn from southeastern NM into the Big
Bend region of southwest TX. The dryline will mix/advect eastward
across the southern High Plains through the day, reaching the
eastern TX Panhandle and Permian Basin regions by late afternoon.
Thereafter, where not muddled by outflow, the dryline should retreat
northwestward overnight. The warm front is forecast to move/develop
northward across AR, OK and portions of the TX Panhandle through the
day, reaching the Ozarks this evening and overnight. Warm-frontal
progress will be tempered somewhat by the presence of abundant
precip to its north; however, extreme mass response forecast in
advance of the mid/upper-level trough should contribute to enough
warm-sector thetae advection and maintenance to keep the warm-
frontal baroclinic gradient sharp, and the dryline well-defined.

...Southern Plains and vicinity...
For details regarding ongoing hail/wind threats from mainly elevated
storms over the Panhandles/northwest OK area, refer to SPC watches
195/196 and related mesoscale discussions.

A serious outbreak of destructive, tornadic supercells is likely
over parts of this region this afternoon into evening, especially in
the high- and moderate-risk areas. Given the expected fast storm
motions, especially mid-afternoon into evening, a few of the
best-organized supercells may reach an equilibrium with their
already very favorable mesoscale environments long enough to sustain
wide, long-track tornadoes. Very large and damaging hail also is
possible from some of the supercells, along with sporadic severe
downdraft gusts. The hail threat will extend farther north of the
warm front than the wind and tornado potential. The wind-damage
threat may increase this evening as convection aggregates into
clusters or lines, though tornadoes and hail still will be likely
from any relatively discrete storms. QLCS/line-embedded tornadoes
also are possible. Collectively, the multi-episode threat justifies
maintaining a high risk for this outlook cycle.


Scattered to numerous thunderstorms are expected to develop, in
aggregate, across a substantial portion of the southern Plains from
the dryline eastward across OK, perhaps into western/central AR,
southward to the Red River region and northwest TX. Isolated to
widely scattered convection also may develop farther south in north
TX and west-central/southwest TX along/ahead of the dryline this
afternoon and evening. The first episode should involve moist-
sector convection building gradually into potentially tornadic
supercells by early-mid afternoon, between north TX and
central/western OK, perhaps even over eastern OK/western AR, in
subtle confluence/convergence zones. Without a strong EML, MLCINH
will be modest, with only subtle diabatic heating and ambient
theta-e advection necessary to support them.

Thereafter, several supercells should form near the dryline in a
regime of strengthening deep-layer flow and shear. This activity
will move rapidly northeastward into the warm sector, which will be
characterized by large low-level hodographs and buoyancy. With
steep midlevel lapse rates, upper 60s to 70s F surface dew points
and deep moist layers being common, MLCAPE ranging from 2000-5000
J/kg should develop in the moist sector, amidst 55-70-kt effective-
shear magnitudes. Effective SRH 300-500 J/kg should develop --
locally higher, especially near the warm front. Some areas will
experience a rare combination of 3000+ MLCAPE and 400+ J/kg
effective SRH. The parameter space over much of the region today
will support a threat of violent tornadoes, and the likelihood of
multiple significant (EF2+ events).

...Northeast...
Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms are forecast to develop
this afternoon along/ahead of a surface cold front forecast to cross
the region from west to east. Occasional severe hail and damaging
gusts will be the main concerns, though some supercell potential
exists over the northern parts of the risk area, and a tornado
cannot be ruled out.

Destabilization of the boundary layer is expected throughout the day
and into afternoon, following the passage of a belt of precip now
crossing parts of southern New York and New England in the warm-
advection zone. Both diabatic surface heating and boundary-layer
theta-e advection will contribute to airmass recovery from south to
north ahead of the front. Surface dewpoints 60s F and steep low-
level lapse rates will support 1000-2000 J/kg MLCAPE. Deep shear
will increase northward, supported mainly by speed strengthening
with height, with 35-45-kt effective-shear vectors possible over
parts of New England. The threat should diminish with time this
evening as the remaining inland warm sector shrinks and stabilizes
diabatically near the surface.

..Edwards/Jewell.. 05/20/2019

Forecast soundings across SW OK are quite nasty, this one valid at 4PM and taken south of Clinton, OK.
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All that is to say is be safe everyone.




Links:
Storm Prediction Center
Norman, OK NWS Office Main Page
Amarillo, TX NWS Office Main Page


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jshackles

Gentlemen, we can rebuild it. We have the capability to make the world's first enhanced store. Steam will be that store. Better than it was before.
Stay safe, GAF. Tornados are no joke.
 
Particularly dangerous tornado watch about to be issued for all of southwest and central oklahoma.

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Mesoscale Discussion 0699
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
1117 AM CDT Mon May 20 2019

Areas affected...southwest into central OK...western north-central
TX

Concerning...Severe potential...Tornado Watch likely

Valid 201617Z - 201845Z

Probability of Watch Issuance...95 percent

SUMMARY...A Particularly Dangerous Situation Tornado Watch will
likely be needed for portions of central and western OK.
Observational trends and short-term model guidance suggest a watch
being issued during the 1pm-2pm period.

DISCUSSION...Visible satellite imagery shows a bubbling cumulus
field over western north-central TX into southwest and south-central
OK. Rapid moisture advection is occurring late this morning with
surface dewpoints rising into the lower 70s over southern OK.
Upwards of 4000 J/kg MLCAPE is expected by early to mid afternoon
across western and central OK with intensifying wind profiles.

Short-term model guidance appears to have a reasonable depiction of
free warm sector initiation occurring over southwest and
south-central OK during the 2-3pm period. The observational trend
in visible satellite imagery showing more pronounced bands of low
cloud cover ---perhaps indicative of horizontal convective rolls
and/or low-level confluence zones is supportive evidence for this
model-based depiction. The expectation is for storms to develop on
the northern half of these cloud features with explosive supercell
development likely thereafter. Forecast soundings show a very rare
combination of intense low-level SRH, very moist boundary, and
extreme buoyancy. As such, the risk for strong to violent tornadoes
appears to be increasing later this afternoon into the early
evening.

..Smith.. 05/20/2019

EDIT:

First watch associated with the High Risk is out. Southwest/Central Oklahoma is next.
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Next Watch is out:
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Interesting stat regarding the Watch.


Watch Text:
URGENT - IMMEDIATE BROADCAST REQUESTED
Tornado Watch Number 199
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
135 PM CDT Mon May 20 2019

The NWS Storm Prediction Center has issued a

* Tornado Watch for portions of
Central and Western Oklahoma
Northwest Texas

* Effective this Monday afternoon and evening from 135 PM until
1000 PM CDT.

...THIS IS A PARTICULARLY DANGEROUS SITUATION...

* Primary threats include...
Numerous tornadoes and several intense tornadoes expected
Widespread damaging winds and scattered significant gusts to 80
mph expected
Widespread large hail and scattered very large hail events to 4
inches in diameter expected


SUMMARY...An outbreak of tornadoes, including the risk of intense
and long-track tornadoes, is expected to develop this afternoon
across the watch area. Very large hail and damaging wind gusts are
expected with the numerous supercell storms.


The tornado watch area is approximately along and 95 statute miles
north and south of a line from 40 miles west of Altus OK to 50 miles
east southeast of Chandler OK. For a complete depiction of the watch
see the associated watch outline update (WOUS64 KWNS WOU9).

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

REMEMBER...A Tornado Watch means conditions are favorable for
tornadoes and severe thunderstorms in and close to the watch
area. Persons in these areas should be on the lookout for
threatening weather conditions and listen for later statements
and possible warnings.

&&

OTHER WATCH INFORMATION...CONTINUE...WW 197...WW 198...

AVIATION...Tornadoes and a few severe thunderstorms with hail
surface and aloft to 4 inches. Extreme turbulence and surface wind
gusts to 70 knots. A few cumulonimbi with maximum tops to 600. Mean
storm motion vector 23035.

...Hart
 

Ownage

Member
It's "Tornado Alley." Been studied since before the 80s. An interesting place to live. I've driven thru that area during a few squall lines. The sky looks like what Book of Revelations might predict.
 
Yeah, it didn't turn out nearly as bad as it could have been. Flooding ended up being a bigger story I think. For whatever reason the storms in the warm sector never developed, so at least Central Oklahoma got lucky. Temperatures aloft a couple of degrees too warm I don't know. Not exactly a bust as there were storms and tornadoes, but I wouldn't call it an outbreak either.
 
I hope everyone has stayed/is staying safe. Is the worst over?
There is a risk for storms across Missouri and Arkansas today, but nothing extreme is being forecast like yesterday.

This tornado near Mangum, OK was one of the storms of the day, aside from the earlier tornadoes in Texas.






How would you like to see this moving behind the houses across the street from where you live?
 
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