Dan Robinson
EF5
A nice negatively-tilted shortwave trough will spread strongly diffluent flow aloft over a dryline in the central Plains on Sunday afternoon and evening as a narrow tongue of moisture in the form of mid to upper 50s dewpoints makes its way northward into central Oklahoma and Kansas. Lapse rates could be better, but are adequate enough.
The negative is mainly the meager moisture and a strong capping inversion shown between 700-850mb. NAM shows no precip through 00z (end of its range at the time of this post), while the GFS is not breaking anything out until after 03z. Also, surface winds are not shown backing much, even after the LLJ starts kicking in at sunset.
This looks like a couple of photogenic supercells after dark (should be nice for nighttime lightning) from near Wichita down to OKC. I don't see this as a worthy opportunity for a long haul chase, but that could change if the moisture situation improves.
The negative is mainly the meager moisture and a strong capping inversion shown between 700-850mb. NAM shows no precip through 00z (end of its range at the time of this post), while the GFS is not breaking anything out until after 03z. Also, surface winds are not shown backing much, even after the LLJ starts kicking in at sunset.
This looks like a couple of photogenic supercells after dark (should be nice for nighttime lightning) from near Wichita down to OKC. I don't see this as a worthy opportunity for a long haul chase, but that could change if the moisture situation improves.
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