• MESO: Tornado Watch

    From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Wed Mar 17 19:13:00 2021
    ACUS11 KWNS 172249
    SWOMCD
    SPC MCD 172249
    GAZ000-ALZ000-MSZ000-LAZ000-180015-

    Mesoscale Discussion 0212
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0549 PM CDT Wed Mar 17 2021

    Areas affected...Much of southeastern Mississippi and central
    Alabama

    Concerning...Tornado Watch 29...33...

    Valid 172249Z - 180015Z

    The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 29, 33 continues.

    SUMMARY...The risk for tornadoes, a couple of which could become
    strong and particularly damaging, is expected to continue to
    increase through mid to late evening as an organizing squall line
    overspreads the region. This may also be accompanied by more
    general strong to severe surface gusts. A new tornado watch will be
    needed by 7 PM CDT.

    DISCUSSION...Large-scale ascent, aided by lower/mid tropospheric
    warm advection beneath difluent high-level flow, continues to
    support discrete thunderstorm development within a relatively broad
    warm sector. Areas of the warm sector not substantially impacted by
    prior convection remain characterized by CAPE of 1000-2000 J/kg, and
    wind profiles across the region exhibit strong deep-layer shear and
    sizable, clockwise-curved low-level hodographs. This environment
    remains potentially conducive to long-lived supercells with strong
    low-level mesocyclones posing a risk for tornadoes.

    While the onset of diurnal cooling could result in at least some
    decrease in instability by 00-01Z, favorable large-scale forcing for
    ascent seems likely to maintain discrete storm development across
    central Alabama, as a linear convective system continues to evolve
    upstream, across southeastern Louisiana through southern and eastern Mississippi. This is occurring ahead of a vigorous short wave
    trough turning east-northeast of the southern Great Plains. As this
    feature progresses into the lower/middle Mississippi Valley through
    mid/late evening, south-southwesterly 850 mb flow is forecast to
    strengthen in excess of 50 kt in a corridor along/ahead of the
    evolving squall line.

    Further enlargement of low-level hodographs will maintain the risk
    for tornadoes with both the discrete supercells preceding the the
    squall line and those forming within the squall line. This will
    include the potential for strong tornadoes. Otherwise, corridors of potentially damaging wind gusts will probably begin to increase as
    the evolving squall line continues to organize and accelerate
    northeastward.

    ..Kerr.. 03/17/2021

    ATTN...WFO...FFC...BMX...HUN...MOB...JAN...LIX...

    LAT...LON 31958982 33108866 34018760 34198650 33098473 32388488
    31968596 31388687 30858797 30398875 30648987 31958982

    $$
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  • From Weather Alert@618:250/1 to All on Thu Mar 18 18:13:00 2021
    ACUS11 KWNS 182157
    SWOMCD
    SPC MCD 182157
    VAZ000-NCZ000-SCZ000-182300-

    Mesoscale Discussion 0225
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0457 PM CDT Thu Mar 18 2021

    Areas affected...far northern South Carolina...much of North
    Carolina...and southern/southeastern Virginia

    Concerning...Tornado Watch 42...43...

    Valid 182157Z - 182300Z

    The severe weather threat for Tornado Watch 42, 43 continues.

    SUMMARY...Tornadoes and damaging wind gusts are possible with
    clusters of ongoing convection. This threat will persist for at
    least the next couple of hours.

    DISCUSSION...Convection initially over north-central North Carolina
    has organized and acquired rotation while favorably interacting with
    a warm frontal zone over far southern Virginia. These storms are in
    a strongly sheared environment with lingering instability upstream
    from an undisturbed environment along/south of the front containing
    1000-1500 J/kg MLCAPE. The general clustered nature of the
    convection suggests potential for several cell interactions, though
    the combination of shear, localized vorticity ingest along the
    front, and moderate instability suggests that the tornado threat
    will exist for at least the next couple hours. Hail is also
    possible near supercellular convection exhibiting stronger updrafts.

    Farther upstream, another quasi-linear segment was located very near
    the Greensboro, NC area and has also exhibited occasionally strong
    rotation on radar. Brief tornadoes and wind damage are likely as
    this area of convection migrates/propagates east-northeastward along
    the remnant frontal boundary in that area.

    More isolated cells farther southwest into north-central South
    Carolina may also exhibit a hail/wind and isolated tornado risk
    given the strong shear and weak instability downstream, although
    slightly veered low-level flow may temper the tornado threat in this
    area compared to farther downstream.

    ..Cook/Guyer.. 03/18/2021

    ATTN...WFO...AKQ...MHX...RAH...ILM...RNK...CAE...GSP...

    LAT...LON 36487971 36897935 37167841 37527744 37627672 37357586
    36617574 36037597 35527667 35137773 34697891 34467989
    34448040 34708075 35308087 35978039 36487971

    $$
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