Jun 29, 2024 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook
Updated: Sat Jun 29 12:49:57 UTC 2024 (20240629 1300Z Day 1 shapefile | 20240629 1300Z Day 1 KML)
Probabilistic to Categorical Outlook Conversion Table
Categorical Graphic
20240629 1300 UTC Day 1 Outlook Graphic
Day 1 Risk Area (sq. mi.) Area Pop. Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
SLIGHT 136,660 22,282,511 Columbus, OH...Cleveland, OH...Pittsburgh, PA...Buffalo, NY...Rochester, NY...
MARGINAL 466,944 61,817,179 Philadelphia, PA...Detroit, MI...Indianapolis, IN...Baltimore, MD...Washington, DC...
Probabilistic Tornado Graphic
20240629 1300 UTC Day 1 Tornado Probabilities Graphic
Probability of a tornado within 25 miles of a point.
Hatched Area: 10% or greater probability of EF2 - EF5 tornadoes within 25 miles of a point.
Day 1 Tornado Risk Area (sq. mi.) Area Pop. Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
5 % 30,974 5,981,085 Pittsburgh, PA...Akron, OH...Canton, OH...Youngstown, OH...Cuyahoga Falls, OH...
2 % 58,962 12,355,394 Columbus, OH...Cleveland, OH...Allentown, PA...Erie, PA...Parma, OH...
Probabilistic Damaging Wind Graphic
20240629 1300 UTC Day 1 Damaging Wind Probabilities Graphic
Probability of damaging thunderstorm winds or wind gusts of 50 knots or higher within 25 miles of a point.
Hatched Area: 10% of greater probability of wind gusts 65 knots or greater within 25 miles of a point.
Day 1 Wind Risk Area (sq. mi.) Area Pop. Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
15 % 136,391 22,276,527 Columbus, OH...Cleveland, OH...Pittsburgh, PA...Buffalo, NY...Rochester, NY...
5 % 466,914 61,833,610 Philadelphia, PA...Detroit, MI...Indianapolis, IN...Baltimore, MD...Washington, DC...
Probabilistic Large Hail Graphic
20240629 1300 UTC Day 1 Large Hail Probabilities Graphic
Probability of hail 1" or larger within 25 miles of a point.
Hatched Area: 10% or greater probability of hail 2" or larger within 25 miles of a point.
Day 1 Hail Risk Area (sq. mi.) Area Pop. Some Larger Population Centers in Risk Area
5 % 196,565 11,115,179 Tulsa, OK...Colorado Springs, CO...St. Louis, MO...Springfield, MO...Evansville, IN...
   SPC AC 291249

   Day 1 Convective Outlook  
   NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
   0749 AM CDT Sat Jun 29 2024

   Valid 291300Z - 301200Z

   ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS OVER PARTS OF THE
   NORTHEAST...AND OVER THE RATON MESA AND NEARBY SOUTH-CENTRAL HIGH
   PLAINS...

   ...SUMMARY...
   Damaging thunderstorm gusts and a few tornadoes are possible today
   over parts of the Lower Great Lakes to upper Ohio Valley, while
   severe gusts also may be focused this afternoon and evening over the
   Raton Mesa and nearby south-central High Plains.

   ...Synopsis...
   Broadly, the upper-air pattern will be characterized by a synoptic
   trough moving ashore from the Pacific and over the West Coast
   States, the downstream ridge moving slowly out of the northern/
   central Rockies onto the adjoining High Plains, and troughing over
   the Great Lakes and vicinity.  Meanwhile, strong subtropical ridging
   will prevail across the Southeast, southern Plains, and NM.

   A northern-stream shortwave trough -- evident in moisture-channel
   imagery over northeastern MN -- will eject east-northeastward today
   and weaken, while effectively replaced by an upstream perturbation
   now over portions of ND/MB.  The resulting shortwave trough should
   proceed eastward across the Upper Great Lakes to Lake Huron and
   adjoining parts of ON by 12Z tomorrow.  To its south and southeast,
   a belt of strong, cyclonically curved flow will cover the mid/upper
   Ohio Valley and Northeast, with minor embedded perturbations (some
   convectively generated upstream from prior/overnight activity).

   At the surface, the 11Z analysis showed a low over central Lake
   Superior, with cold front across central Upper MI, southern WI,
   southern IA, central KS, and north-central NM.  By 00Z, the cold
   front should move to northern IN, central IL, southern MO, northern
   OK, the northern TX Panhandle, and northeastern/central NM.  By 12Z,
   the front should extend from western parts of NY/PA across KY, the
   MO Bootheel area, and northern AR, becoming quasistationary over
   central/western OK, the central TX Panhandle, and east-central NM. 
   A prefrontal surface trough should shift eastward from the St.
   Lawrence Valley/Lower Great Lakes across the northern Appalachians
   and northern Mid-Atlantic States through the period.

   ...Northeast/Ohio Valley/Great Lakes...
   Scattered thunderstorms are expected to form episodically from
   midday through afternoon -- predominantly ahead of the surface cold
   front.  Frontal convection over parts of Lower MI also is possible
   this afternoon, with isolated severe hail/gusts.  The main severe
   threat, however should be over parts of the Lower Great Lakes/upper
   Ohio Valley into nearly Appalachians.

   With weak capping, activity may form on a variety of foci, near the
   main surface trough, outflow boundaries from morning clouds/precip,
   and over areas of differential heating and orographic lift. 
   Activity should organize into one or more lines with embedded
   supercells and bowing/LEWP segments possible.  The main threat will
   be damaging to severe gusts in and near the 15%/"slight" area,
   though any supercells or embedded QLCS vortices also will pose a
   tornado threat.

   Despite weak mid/upper-level lapse rates over most of this region,
   warm-sector moisture will be characterized by mid 60s to lower 70s F
   surface dewpoints.  This will combine with pockets of sustained
   surface heating to yield MLCAPE in the 1000-2000 J/kg range. 
   Veering and strengthening of winds with height in low levels should
   yield enlarged hodographs below 3 km, with effective SRH in the
   150-250 J/kg range overlapping areas of favorable heating in some
   parts of the upper Ohio Valley area into central PA.  Little speed
   shear is apparent from the top of the boundary layer into the
   mid/upper levels, however, limiting deep shear, and storm structure
   may become messy rather quickly.  Overall, convection should weaken
   as it approaches the Atlantic Coast this evening, and the foregoing
   inflow layer becomes more stable.

   ...South-central Rockies/High Plains...
   Isolated to scattered thunderstorms are forecast to develop this
   afternoon over higher terrain from the southern Front Range area
   across the Sangre de Cristos and Raton Mesa.  This will occur as
   strong heating of higher terrain preferentially erodes MLCINH, in
   the presence of post-frontal upslope flow in low levels, and related
   moisture advection to at least partially offset moisture loss due to
   mixing.  The easterly component also should aid storm-relative
   boundary-layer flow and deep shear for activity propagating eastward
   off the elevated terrain, with a mix of multicells and transient
   supercells possible.

   Despite modest low/middle-level wind speeds, forecast soundings
   reasonably depict enough veering with height to yield 35-45-kt
   effective-shear magnitudes, amidst 500-1500 J/kg MLCAPE and steep
   boundary-layer lapse rates.  Some of the resulting convection may
   coalesce into a complex of thunderstorms with a cold pool, in turn
   driving eastward-directed forward propagation near the post-frontal
   moist axis and across parts of southeastern CO, northeastern NM, the
   adjacent Panhandles, and or southwestern KS, with a relatively
   focused threat of severe gusts.

   ...Ozarks/south-central Plains...
   Ongoing, isolated to widely scattered convection over parts of KS/MO
   should weaken/dissipate through the remainder of the morning, but
   may leave behind enough cloud material and (especially in MO)
   outflow to augment frontal baroclinicity for afternoon convective
   initiation.  Widely scattered to scattered thunderstorms should
   develop on and near the front this afternoon from northern OK and
   extreme southern KS to the Ozarks, in a regime of MLCINH
   substantially removed by modest low-level convergence and strong
   diurnal/prefrontal heating.  Deep mixing south of the front should
   reduce surface dewpoints and buoyancy in the warm sector, but
   adequate moisture (with 60s to low 70s F surface dewpoints) should
   linger in a narrow post-frontal corridor supporting 2000-3000 J/kg
   MLCAPE.  

   The net result should be high-based, multicell thunderstorms in
   mostly weak deep shear, with pulse severe in the form of gusts and
   hail.  A conditional risk exists for locally significant (65+ kt)
   gusts, given the favorably deep subcloud mixed layer with large
   DCAPE.  However, mesoscale foci for denser coverage of such a threat
   still appear too nebulous for a 15% unconditional gust outlook
   within the broader marginal area.

   ..Edwards/Kerr.. 06/29/2024

   CLICK TO GET WUUS01 PTSDY1 PRODUCT

   NOTE: THE NEXT DAY 1 OUTLOOK IS SCHEDULED BY 1630Z