In house "RPM" forecast of line of thunderstorms approaching the Chicago Metro area by midnight

In house "RPM" forecast of line of thunderstorms approaching the Chicago Metro area by midnight

 

Downstate areas into Chicago south and Indiana suburbs being monitored for possible severe weather watch

Downstate areas into Chicago south and Indiana suburbs being monitored for possible severe weather watch


MESOSCALE DISCUSSION 0729
   NWS STORM PREDICTION CENTER NORMAN OK
   0327 PM CDT MON MAY 20 2013

   AREAS AFFECTED...NERN MO...CNTRL IL...W-CNTRL IND

   CONCERNING...SEVERE POTENTIAL...WATCH POSSIBLE 

   VALID 202027Z - 202130Z

   PROBABILITY OF WATCH ISSUANCE...60 PERCENT

   SUMMARY...PROSPECTS FOR TSTM DEVELOPMENT ARE SOMEWHAT UNCERTAIN
   ACROSS W-CNTRL IND WWD INTO NERN MO...BUT THE ENVIRONMENT IS
   FAVORABLE FOR DMGG WINDS AND HAIL GIVEN STRONG
   HEATING/DESTABILIZATION.  CONVECTIVE TRENDS ARE BEING MONITORED FOR
   A POSSIBLE WW...PARTICULARLY ACTIVITY DEVELOPING NEWD FROM SWRN MO
   TOWARDS THE MID-MS VALLEY.

   DISCUSSION...RADAR/SATELLITE TRENDS SHOW A DECAYING TSTM CLUSTER/MCV
   MOVING ACROSS N-CNTRL IL...WITH AN INCREASE IN SHALLOW BOUNDARY
   LAYER CU NOTED ACROSS E-CNTRL IL. THIS APPEARS TO BE DEVELOPING
   WITHIN A WEAK CONFLUENCE AXIS WHICH EXTENDS FROM 30 SE MMO TO 20 SSW
   SPI. BOTH MODIFIED 12Z RAOBS AND 12Z NAM FORECAST SOUNDINGS SUGGEST
   MLCAPE VALUES HAVE INCREASED TO 1000-1500 J/KG. WHILE THERE IS STILL
   SOME UNCERTAINTY TO WHAT DEGREE TSTMS WILL INTENSIFY/ORGANIZE OVER
   IL...A THREAT FOR DMGG WINDS AND LARGE HAIL COULD DEVELOP GIVEN
   STEEP LOW-LEVEL LAPSE RATES AND MODERATELY STRONG DEEP-LAYER SHEAR.
   ADDITIONALLY...TSTMS CURRENTLY DEVELOPING OVER WRN MO SHOULD
   EXPAND/DEVELOP NEWD TOWARDS E-CNTRL MO THROUGH LATE AFTERNOON. IT IS
   UNCERTAIN WHETHER A WW WILL BE REQUIRED WITHIN THE NEXT 1-2
   HRS...BUT CONVECTIVE TRENDS CONTINUE TO BE MONITORED.

   ..ROGERS/KERR.. 05/20/2013

Kansas twister

Posted on: May 20th, 2013 3:12 PM by Steve Kahn No Comments

 

What a incredible photo from our friend Lorraine Mahoney!  This tornado occurred near Rozel, Kansas.

 

Photo courtesy of Lorraine Mahoney, Rozel, Kansas

Photo courtesy of Lorraine Mahoney, Rozel, Kansas

 

 

Tornado outbreaks are known for their devastation and for peculiar stories which accompany them.  Here's one: This paper was blown 80 miles from near Shawnee, OK to the Tulsa area in part of the mammoth EF-4 intensity twister which ripped across that section of the country.  Larry Gordon Wilson took this photo and tells us magazines, newspapers and photos fell to earth in his area, having traveled, near as he can tell, near 80 miles from the point of origin.

Photo courtesy of Larry Gordon Wilson, Tulsa, OK

Photo courtesy of Larry Gordon Wilson, Tulsa, OK

Last night’s thunderstorms as viewed from Wauconda

Posted on: May 20th, 2013 3:35 PM by Steve Kahn No Comments

 

Last night's thunderstorms, which were most pronounced over western sections of the metro area, produced lightning like the discharges photographed in the Wauconda area by Dirk Leahy.

Photo courtesy of Dirk Leahy, Wauconda, IL

Photo courtesy of Dirk Leahy, Wauconda, IL

Rain shaft beneath a Kansas thunderstorm

Posted on: May 20th, 2013 3:00 PM by Steve Kahn No Comments

 

Here’s a the rain shaft beneath another Kansas thunderstorm Sunday from Brad Hurza shot near Ellis and Victoria, Kansas.

 

rainshaft

 

Kansas wall cloud

Posted on: May 20th, 2013 3:41 PM by Steve Kahn No Comments

 

This Victoria, Kansas wall cloud and emerging tornado from storm chaser Brad Hruza. More than 500 severe weather reports, including 29 tornado reports, were filed Sunday and Sunday night with the Storm Prediction Center.  Wall clouds like this one are region’s of the thunderstorm where air is rising quickly. Tornadoes often spin up beneath wall clouds, which appear as an isolated lowering of the base of thunderstorm clouds—often in the rear southwest quadrant of the thunderstorm.

Photo by Brad Hruza

Photo by Brad Hruza

Season’s first organized severe weather threat expected later today

Posted on: May 20th, 2013 1:26 PM by Mike Hamernik No Comments

 

Cool temperatures and the absence of high humidity have suppressed severe thunderstorm activity across much of the Midwest this Spring.  Locally, the quiet severe weather season is expected to come to an abrupt end late this afternoon and this evening as clusters of strong to severe thunderstorms rake across much of Illinois, northern Indiana and southern Wisconsin.

 

Timing

Storms could fire anytime this afternoon, however the highest probability will be between 6PM and 1AM.

 

 

Type of severe weather

All thunderstorms that develop later today will produce lightning, gusty winds and periods of heavy rain.  A few of these storms are expected to turn "severe".

 

A thunderstorm is not considered "severe" unless it  is producing damage via wind, hail or a tornado.   Damage begins to occur when:

 

-Hail size reaches or exceeds 1.00" in diameter.

 

-Wind gusts reach or exceed  58mph.

 

 

BELOW:  One possible storm scenario is depicted by our in house RPM model indicating several strong to severe thunderstorms roaming portions of northeast Illinois around 9PM tonight.

 

rpm520

 

 

 

Tim’s Weather World: Stormy start to the week

Posted on: May 20th, 2013 7:28 AM by Tim McGill No Comments

 

( GENE BLEVINS, REUTERS / May 20, 2013 )

( GENE BLEVINS, REUTERS / May 20, 2013 )

 

It won't be a washout but the week will start out stormy at times.  Clusters of thunderstorms fueld by warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico could reach severe limits with the help of strong jet stream winds.  The Storm Prediction Center has us outlooked for a slight risk of severe weather for both today (top image below) and tomorrow (bottom image below).

 

day1otlk_1200

day2otlk_0600

 

SPC forecasters say there is a potential for tornadoes:

 

...BOUTS OF DAMAGING WINDS/SEVERE HAIL AND A COUPLE
OF TORNADOES ALL POSSIBLE ACROSS THE REGION.

There were at least 20 states this weekend that reported severe weather.  Yesterday alone there were 28 reports of tornadoes across 4 states.  That brings the total number of preliminary reports of tornadoes to 251 so far this year with 9 deaths.  While the 2013 severe weather season is getting more active it still pales in comparison to last year when 617 tornadoes were reported through May with 66 deaths.

 

http://twitter.com/WGNWeatherGuy

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A center of low pressure will be moving east through Minnesota today while a warm front extends east across northern Wisconsin and the associated cold front sweeps east into Iowa. Illinois rests in the “warm sector” of this system with southerly winds pulling warm moist unstable air out of the central plains into the Midwest and western Great Lakes.

A band of showers and a few thunderstorms will work northeast through central into northern Illinois this morning with stronger – potentially severe  storms expected to develop over northeast Illinois, southeast Wisconsin, northwest Indiana into southern Lower Michigan later this afternoon into tonight.

As this weather system advances east, the cold front should sweep through the Chicago area later Tuesday. The threat of strong potentially severe storms here could carry-over from  Monday night into Tuesday morning.

In the severe weather outlook map below, much of illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and Lower Michigan are in the slight risk areas for later today and tonight. The slight risk is approximently a 15 percent chance of damaging hail and winds in excess of 58 mph as well as a 5 percent chance of tornadoes within 25 miles of a given point.