
Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0712 AM CDT Fri Mar 13 2026 Valid 131300Z - 141200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Organized severe thunderstorms are not expected. ...NY/PA... a fast-moving and well-defined shortwave trough is indicated over WI. This feature will track across the Great Lakes and affect parts of PA/NY later this afternoon and evening. Strong low-level warm advection and lift will aid in the development of showers and isolated thunderstorms over southern Ontario and parts of central/western NY/PA. While lightning activity will likely be sparse, strong low-level winds and steepening mid-level lapse rates could result in gusty showers and thunderstorms with isolated severe winds possible. ...FL... A few afternoon thunderstorms are expected today over central/south FL, along and ahead of a surface cold front. Weak winds aloft should preclude severe storms. ..Hart/Weinman.. 03/13/2026Read more

Day 4-8 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0358 AM CDT Fri Mar 13 2026 Valid 161200Z - 211200Z ...DISCUSSION... Significant severe winds and the potential for a few tornadoes will develop on Monday over parts of the Carolinas and Mid Atlantic. Models are in good agreement with the large scale pattern on Monday/D4, depicting a deep upper trough moving out of the Mississippi Valley and ejecting in negative-tilt fashion across the Mid Atlantic and into to the Northeast. Given the antecedent upper ridging on the previous day, low-level southerly winds will help to moisten the air mass well ahead of an approaching cold front. By 12Z Monday, 60s F dewpoints will already extend from northern GA across the Piedmont and into southeast VA, and this plume of moisture will rapidly spread north with near 60 F dewpoints into southeast PA by 00Z. There appears to be two regimes for severe potential on Monday. First, up to 1000 J/kg MUCAPE may develop well ahead of the approaching cold front, and there is some indication that scattered convection may occur across the warm sector from mid to late afternoon. If this occurs, supercells would be most likely, with potential for a few tornadoes from the Carolinas into eastern VA. Models also indicate an elongated pressure fall/rise couplet, which when combined with 50-70 kt 850 mb winds and extreme low-level shear, could easily result in a QLCS along the cold front with corridors of significant damaging winds and embedded tornado risk. Beyond Monday/D4, stable air behind this system will likely preclude any severe threat through Friday/D8.Read more