"Minimum
dewpoints" is a relative term. Let's get back to basics.
The three ingredients necessary for a
thunderstorm are:
1) Sufficient
water vapor (i.e., "
dewpoints") to fulfill ingredient #2
2)
Unstable air (almost always
condition instability)
3) A source of lift (
front,
dryline,
upslope flow, etc.) to release the
condition instability
Thus, whatever the minimum
dewpoint is necessary to create
unstable air would be the "minimum
dewpoint" required.
As long as those three ingredients exist, a
thunderstorm can continue to generate new
cells to keep itself alive.
For
supercells, a balance between
CAPE and shear is necessary. A big limiting factor for cold/cool season outbreaks is insufficient
CAPE for the high-shear environment.
The Bulk Richardson Number (BRN) is a
dimensionless number in
meteorology relating vertical stability and vertical
shear (generally, stability divided by shear). High values indicate unstable and/or weakly-sheared
environments; low values indicate weak
instability and/or strong vertical shear. Generally, values in the range of around 10 to 45 suggest environmental conditions favorable for
supercelldevelopment. If the BRN is too low, the updraft gets strongly tilted with height and is disrupted.
Now, what are
optimal dewpoints for a "massive
tornado outbreak." I assume by
tornado outbreak, you mean an outbreak in which multiple
supercells produce multiple significant (EF2+) tornadoes across multiple states. Something that would rank in the top 20
tornado outbreaks of all time.
A
tornado outbreak on that scale would typically require a large breeding ground (over ~250,000 square miles) with a tropical maritime airmass.
Tropical maritime airmasses (mTw) then enter the U.S. originate over the topical Atlantic Ocean and Carribean Sea. They are characterized by a 1,500 to 3,000 meter (5,000 to 10,000 ft) deep, well-mixed moist layer. Surface
dewpoints are typically in the low-mid 60s in cold/cool season (i.e, October-April)
tornado outbreaks and upper 60s-mid 70's in warm season (i.e., May-September)
tornado outbreaks.