Skip Talbot
EF5
I've seen many setups like this fail to materialize when presented at this time range, but thought it might be interesting to open a discussion for a possible severe weather event in western Iowa on Sunday. 0z and 12z NAM are both showing a cut off 500 mb and surface low stacked over southeastern South Dakota with a fairly narrow warm sector extending down through western Iowa bounded by warm and cold fronts. Dews at the surface are well below par for a typical severe weather event at about 45F into central Iowa, but for a cold core like event may be sufficient for low topped supercells or even tornadoes given the extremely cold air aloft: -30C pooling around the cut off low at 500 mb. It may seem way too early in the season to be chasing tornadoes in Iowa and a modest play at best, but there are several plots that are really jumping out at me:
Very impressive low level instability by mid afternoon in southwest and central Iowa. Some of the fattest low level cape you can expect to see in fact, and a crucial although fairly unpredictable parameter for these types of setups.
A well defined dry slot wrapping into the warm sector by noon, which should pave the way for strong solar heating and destabilization.
And finally, the cap opening up at noon and a 100(!) knot midlevel jet nosing into the warm sector.
If this verifies, I'd expect southwest Iowa to be destabilized by noon and storms exploding on the nose of that excessively strong mid level trough. Forecast soundings show very impressive lapse rates, "fat" low level cape for robust albeit low topped updrafts, and very favorable shear parameters. Storms may produce tornadoes as they approach the warm front draped across central Iowa where 1km SRH exceeds 200 m2/s2 and while low level instability is maximized from daytime heating. If this setup materializes I'll be out on my first '13 chase targeting an area between Atlantic and Creston, IA (adjust as the models converge a solution for the surface features). On the other hand, these cold core setups love to fall through and this one already stands on the edge of a knife. If we drop a few more degrees on those dews, or the low ejects or occludes early, this is going to be a non event in Iowa and a Louisiana squall line.

Very impressive low level instability by mid afternoon in southwest and central Iowa. Some of the fattest low level cape you can expect to see in fact, and a crucial although fairly unpredictable parameter for these types of setups.

A well defined dry slot wrapping into the warm sector by noon, which should pave the way for strong solar heating and destabilization.


And finally, the cap opening up at noon and a 100(!) knot midlevel jet nosing into the warm sector.
If this verifies, I'd expect southwest Iowa to be destabilized by noon and storms exploding on the nose of that excessively strong mid level trough. Forecast soundings show very impressive lapse rates, "fat" low level cape for robust albeit low topped updrafts, and very favorable shear parameters. Storms may produce tornadoes as they approach the warm front draped across central Iowa where 1km SRH exceeds 200 m2/s2 and while low level instability is maximized from daytime heating. If this setup materializes I'll be out on my first '13 chase targeting an area between Atlantic and Creston, IA (adjust as the models converge a solution for the surface features). On the other hand, these cold core setups love to fall through and this one already stands on the edge of a knife. If we drop a few more degrees on those dews, or the low ejects or occludes early, this is going to be a non event in Iowa and a Louisiana squall line.