Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0230 AM CDT Fri Oct 17 2025 Valid 191200Z - 201200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE OHIO VALLEY AND APPALACHIANS... ...SUMMARY... Severe storms with a threat mainly for damaging winds are possible over parts of the Ohio Valley and Appalachians Sunday. ...Synopsis... A strong neutral to slightly negative tilt upper trough over the OH Valley and Great Lakes is forecast to continue intensifying as it moves quickly eastward Sunday. At the base of the trough, a 90+ kt jet streak will lift northward into the upper OH Valley and Northeast deepening a surface low over the Great Lakes and eastern Canada. Strong southerly winds ahead of the low will support a modestly moist air mass from eastern OH/KY into western PA and WV. A cold front expected to move eastward with the low will serve as a focus for thunderstorm potential Sunday morning through Sunday evening. ...OH Valley and Appalachians... A squall line is likely to be ongoing at the start of the period from central/eastern OH into northern KY ahead of the front and deepening surface low. Strong ascent from the trough/jet streak should maintain this shallow convective line into portions of PA/WV by early afternoon. With upper 50s to low 60s F dewpoints and only modest heating, buoyancy appears limited. However, the strong flow aloft should still support a risk for damaging gusts. Backed flow ahead of the surface low will favor large low-level shear which could support embedded rotation with the potential for a brief tornado or two. Storms will gradually weaken with eastward extent as available buoyancy wanes into the evening. ...Central Gulf Coast and the Southeast... At the start of the period, a few storms may be ongoing along the front as it continues east/southeastward across southern MS/AL and western FL. With marginal buoyancy and on the southern fringes of the stronger flow aloft, a few strong wind gusts cannot be ruled out, but convection should weaken through the morning before moving offshore. The cold front will continues eastward through the remainder of the day with remnant showers and cloud cover likely ahead of it. Still, some heating and destabilization is possible across the Southeast and southern Appalachians. However, weak subsidence is expected over much of the region as the primary upper trough and jet streak begin to lift away to the north. This currently suggests limited redevelopment will occur along the front Sunday afternoon, though there remains substantial uncertainty. While isolated storms cannot be ruled out, confidence remains too low for severe probabilities. ..Lyons.. 10/17/2025Read more
Day 2 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0148 AM CDT Fri Oct 17 2025 Valid 181200Z - 191200Z ...Synopsis... A surface low will deepen across the central/southern Plains on D2/Saturday as a front shifts south across the southern Plains. The dryline will be located across the Texas Panhandle into western Oklahoma. Behind the dryline, relative humidity reductions to 15-20 percent will overlap with warm and breezy conditions ahead of the southward moving cold front. Overall, ensemble guidance keeps spatial extent of any Critical conditions very limited. As such, an Elevated area was maintained with this outlook though some localized Critical conditions will be possible. ..Thornton.. 10/17/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more
Day 1 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0147 AM CDT Fri Oct 17 2025 Valid 171200Z - 181200Z ...NO CRITICAL AREAS... ...Synopsis... Fire weather concerns will remain low today across the CONUS. A large scale trough will gradually shift into the Plains through D2/Saturday with post-frontal west and northwesterly breezes expected in the central/high Plains. Cooler temperatures and higher relative humidity should mitigate fire weather concerns in this region. High pressure will build back in across the western US with increase in onshore flow and breezy/dry conditions in wind prone areas near the high terrain in southern California. Recent rainfall in this region should help mitigate the fire weather risk. ..Thornton.. 10/17/2025 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more
Day 2 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0100 AM CDT Fri Oct 17 2025 Valid 181200Z - 191200Z ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM THE ARKLATEX TO THE CENTRAL MISSISSIPPI AND LOWER OHIO VALLEYS... ...SUMMARY... Scattered severe thunderstorms are possible Saturday across parts of the Ark-La-Tex, Ozarks, mid Mississippi and lower Ohio Valleys. Damaging winds, a few tornadoes and hail are possible. ...Synopsis... A broad upper trough over the central US is forecast to deepen throughout Saturday as several peripheral shortwave features coalesce over the central MS Valley. The most prominent of these features will start the period over the southern Rockies before phasing with the broader trough across the southern Plains Saturday night. A powerful 100+ kt mid-level jet exiting the central Rockies/High Plains will round the base of the consolidated trough helping to rapidly deepen a surface low over the OH Valley and Lower Great Lakes. A cold front with strong southerly flow ahead of it will sweep eastward from the OH/MS Valleys into the Mid South overnight supporting scattered to numerous thunderstorms. ...Ohio Valley to the Ozarks... Mid-level ascent with an embedded perturbation will expand over the slow-moving cold front initially positioned from the Ozarks to the Lower Great Lakes and OH Valley early Saturday. Southerly flow will allow for substantial moistening as low to mid 60s F surface dewpoints move northward across MO/IL, into western KY and OH and eventually Lower MI. Continued low-level warm advection should result in scattered to numerous thunderstorms along the front by mid afternoon into the evening. While buoyancy should be limited (500-1000 J/kg) owing to increasing storm coverage and cloud cover, elongated mid/upper-level hodographs with largely unidirectional shear will favor some potential for organized short line segments. This activity should generally become more organized into the afternoon/evening as the cold front strengthens and surges eastward as the upper trough and surface low organize. This will support a risk for damaging gusts and perhaps a couple embedded tornadoes should a more coherent QLCS develop and persist overnight. ...Southern Plains to the Mid MS Valley... Ahead of the primary southern stream shortwave trough, rich low-level moisture will advect northward across parts of TX/OK into the central and lower MS Valley. While some potential exists for early morning convection to modulate the environment, current guidance suggests diurnal destabilization (MLCAPE ~ 2000 J/kg) is likely ahead of surface trough trailing the developing low farther north. Scattered thunderstorm development is expected in the afternoon from northern AR into eastern OK and North TX with the potential for supercell structures capable of damaging gusts and hail initially. With time, the surface cold front over the southern Plains should begin to surge eastward as the advancing shortwave trough phases with the strengthening upper trough. Vertical shear will increase substantially as the mid-level jet streak noses into the Mid South fostering strong low-level mass response. The cold front will likely outpace and overtake the surface trough and ongoing convection supporting rapid upscale growth into a squall line across the central MS Valley Saturday evening into the early overnight hours. While uncertainty about the degree of instability given the overnight timing remains, strengthening low-level wind fields and mid 60s F dewpoints may delay boundary-layer decoupling long enough to support a damaging wind and embedded tornado threat overnight as the QLCS moves eastward. ..Lyons.. 10/17/2025Read more
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 1220 AM CDT Fri Oct 17 2025 Valid 171200Z - 181200Z ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS FROM PARTS OF OK INTO CENTRAL/EASTERN KS AND WESTERN MO... ...SUMMARY... Thunderstorms with isolated hail and strong to severe wind gusts will be possible this evening through the overnight period from the southern and central Plains into the lower Missouri Valley. ...Synopsis... A mid/upper-level cyclone initially near the ND/MB border will move northeastward through the day, as a trailing positive-tilt trough and attendant weak cold front move eastward across the Upper Midwest into the central/southern Great Plains. A mid/upper-level shortwave near the base of this trough is forecast to amplify by late in the period across the southern Rockies. Farther northwest, an upstream shortwave trough and vigorous mid/upper-level jet will dig southeastward across the northern Rockies late tonight. ...Parts of the southern/central Plains into the lower MO Valley... Weak to locally moderate destabilization will be possible by late afternoon from parts of the southern/central Plains into the lower MO Valley, along/ahead of the weak surface trough/front. Generally weak midlevel lapse rates and modest large-scale ascent will tend to limit diurnal storm potential, but isolated strong-storm development cannot be ruled out by early evening. An increase in primarily elevated convection is expected from mid/late evening onward, in response to a nocturnally strengthening low-level jet, and eventual approach of the southern Rockies shortwave trough. Increasing deep-layer flow/shear and some steepening of midlevel lapse rates late in the period will support potential for at least transient storm organization tonight, though guidance continues to vary regarding the coverage and intensity of overnight elevated convection. Isolated large hail and localized strong/damaging gusts will be possible with the strongest storms into early Saturday morning. ..Dean/Thornton.. 10/17/2025Read more