
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0400 AM CST Sun Feb 15 2026 Valid 181200Z - 231200Z ...DISCUSSION... Medium-range model output suggests that amplified large-scale troughing, initially centered near the Pacific coast at the outset of the period, will gradually develop eastward, across and east of the Rockies during the latter half of the week into next weekend. It appears that this will occur in generally piecemeal fashion, as a series of smaller-scale/lower amplitude perturbations. However, given the presence of an initially seasonably warm environment to the lee of the Rockies, potential exists for periodic lee surface cyclogenesis, possible strong. To this point, guidance has exhibited rather poor predictability with these features, but there does appear at least somewhat greater certainty in potential for substantive surface cyclogenesis by Thursday, across the central Great Plains toward the Great Lakes region. Even so, it still appears that preceding Gulf boundary-layer moistening and inland return flow will only support limited moistening within the developing warm sector across the middle Mississippi Valley through much of the day Thursday. By Thursday night, there are indications that a modest late moisture surge into the lower Ohio Valley could contribute to increasing convective potential, but the extent of the severe threat remains unclear at this time. Guidance still indicates that better low-level moisture return may commence ahead of the cold front trailing the cyclone, across parts of the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys through Ark-La-Tex and southern Great Plains Friday into Saturday, as upstream perturbations begin to emerge from the West. However, current model output suggests that renewed cyclogenesis may be more subdued, and it is possible that convection may tend to develop and train along and to the cool side of the front and/or outflow, with uncertain severe weather potential.Read more

Day 3 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0228 AM CST Sun Feb 15 2026 Valid 171200Z - 181200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Scattered thunderstorm activity is possible across Pacific coastal areas and the Central Valley of California Tuesday into Tuesday night, as well as across parts of the mid Missouri Valley into Upper Midwest Tuesday night. However, the risk for severe storms appears low. ...Discussion... Models indicate that a lower/mid-tropospheric cyclone, initially offshore of the Pacific Northwest coast, will weaken while migrating inland Tuesday. However, an associated intense offshore northerly mid/upper jet streak is forecast to continue digging southeastward toward coastal areas south of San Francisco Bay, through the southern Sierra Nevada, maintaining amplified larger-scale troughing across and inland of the U.S. Pacific coast. The remnants of a preceding inland migrating trough, including at least a couple of emerging smaller-scale perturbations, are forecast to pivot east and northeast of the Rockies, across much of the middle and lower Missouri Valley by late Tuesday night, as a broad belt of seasonably strong west-southwesterly flow continues developing to the lee of the southern Rockies through the Mid Atlantic Seaboard. In lower levels, the latest model output suggests that initially deep surface troughing, along an axis from the northern Rockies into the central and southern Great Plains, will shift across the middle and lower Missouri Valley toward the Upper Midwest. However, it appears that it will slowly weaken as it does, and stronger southerly low-level flow across the central/southern Great Plains into Ohio Valley is likely to maintain a notable westerly component. Coupled with preceding low-level drying across much of the Gulf Basin, low-level moisture return will be rather limited beneath a warm/dry elevated mixed-layer initially overspreading much of the central and southern Great Plains through middle and lower Mississippi Valley. ...Pacific Coast... Low probabilities for thunderstorm activity may linger into early Tuesday nearly southern California coastal areas. However, the primary convective potential, including scattered thunderstorm development, seems likely to become focused across northern and central California coastal areas into the Central Valley Tuesday afternoon into Tuesday night. This will accompany strong mid-level cooling and forcing for ascent associated with the digging mid/upper jet. Stronger cells may become capable of producing at least small hail and gusty winds, but it is not yet clear that thermodynamic profiles will support activity approaching or exceeding severe limits. ...Mid Missouri Valley into Upper Midwest... There appears at least some signal in the latest model output that the limited moisture return, coupled with strong differential lower/mid-tropospheric thermal advection, could support weak elevated convection capable of producing lightning in a corridor spreading northeast of the middle Missouri Valley Tuesday evening. ..Kerr.. 02/15/2026Read more