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|    WEATHER    |    Messages from the national weather servi    |    41,475 messages    |
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|    Message 39,815 of 41,475    |
|    COD Weather Processor to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu    |
|    DAY2SVR: Nws Storm Prediction Center Nor    |
|    27 Dec 25 17:55:45    |
      TZUTC: 0000       MSGID: 168017.weather@1:2320/105 2db7e3fb       PID: Synchronet 3.21a-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0       TID: SBBSecho 3.28-Linux master/123f2d28a Jul 12 2025 GCC 12.2.0       BBSID: CAPCITY2       CHRS: ASCII 1       FORMAT: flowed       ACUS02 KWNS 271755       SWODY2       SPC AC 271754              Day 2 Convective Outlook CORR 1       NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK       1154 AM CST Sat Dec 27 2025              Valid 281200Z - 291200Z              ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SUNDAY AFTERNOON       AND EVENING ACROSS PARTS OF EAST CENTRAL AND SOUTHEAST       MISSOURI...ADJACENT NORTHEASTERN ARKANSAS AND NORTHWESTERN       TENNESSEE...CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN ILLINOIS...INDIANA...WESTERN OHIO       AND ADJACENT SOUTHERN LOWER MICHIGAN...WESTERN AND NORTHERN       KENTUCKY...              CORRECTED FOR TYPOS              ...SUMMARY...       Strong thunderstorms may develop across parts of the middle       Mississippi Valley Sunday afternoon, accompanied by at least some       risk for severe weather while spreading into the lower Ohio Valley       through Sunday evening. This may include potential for a tornado or       two across parts of central Illinois into north central Indiana.       Otherwise, potentially damaging wind gusts appear the primary severe       threat.              ...Discussion...       Much of the interior U.S. remains anomalously warm, as westerlies       across the Pacific into western North America undergo amplification.       Later today through Sunday, models indicate that this will include       mid/upper ridging building inland across British Columbia and the       Pacific Northwest, through the Canadian/northern U.S. Rockies and       adjacent Prairies/northern Great Plains. Downstream, it appears       that a pair of short wave troughs will come in phase while migrating       across and east of the Rockies, and provide support for strong       cyclogenesis. By late Sunday night, guidance generally indicates       that the center of a deep, occluding surface low will reach the Lake       Huron/Georgian Bay vicinity, with a strong trailing cold front       advancing through the western slopes of the Appalachians and       northwestern Gulf/Gulf coast region.              ...Middle Mississippi/Ohio Valley...       There remains notable spread within/among the various model output       concerning the evolution of the developing surface cyclone across       the lower Missouri Valley through Great Lakes region, including       timing of periods of more rapid deepening Sunday through Sunday       night. This could substantially impact the location, timing and       extent of any associated thunderstorm development and accompanying       severe weather potential.              In general, it does appear that the pre-frontal warm sector will be       relatively moist, with surface dew points near/above 60F likely as       far north as a developing warm front, east of the deepening surface       low, across parts of middle Mississippi Valley into southern Great       Lakes region by Sunday afternoon. Convection allowing guidance and       other model output suggest that forcing for ascent along the warm       front, near and east of the low, may be the focus for highest       thunderstorm probabilities through the period. However, based on       forecast soundings, relatively warm mid-level temperatures will tend       to minimize CAPE, and the risk for severe hail and wind with       convection rooted above the cool/stable boundary layer appears       negligible.              Relatively warm air aloft appears likely to be problematic within       the surface warm sector as well, particularly given forecast weaker       mid/upper forcing for ascent. However, there does appear a       consensus in model output that a corridor of weak pre-cold frontal       boundary-layer destabilization could develop by early Sunday       afternoon across parts of south central/east central Missouri into       central Illinois. Coincident with strengthening deep-layer wind       fields/shear and perhaps a period of glancing mid/upper support for       upward vertical motion, there may be a window of opportunity for       strong thunderstorm development, which could spread just ahead of       the front into the Ohio Valley before diminishing Sunday evening.              Based on forecast soundings, low-level hodographs to the       east-southeast of the deepening cyclone may become conducive to       low-topped supercells posing the risk for a tornado or two across       parts of central Illinois into north central Indiana late Sunday       afternoon. Otherwise, low-level hodographs, trending more linear       along the cold front to the southwest, will generally support a       narrow line of convection with potential mix down 40-50 kt mean flow       in the lowest 3 to 6 km.              Once thunderstorm development wanes, the potential for convectively       enhanced gusts will diminish, but strong wind gusts associated with       the cold frontal passage are likely through much of the remainder of       the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys.              ..Kerr.. 12/27/2025              $$              = = =       To unsubscribe from WX-STORM and you already have a login, go to       https://lists.illinois.edu and use the "Unsubscribe" link. Otherwise email       Chris Novy at cnovy@cox.net and ask to be removed from WX-STORM.              --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux        * Origin: Capitol City Online (1:2320/105)       SEEN-BY: 1/19 100 16/0 19/10 37 104/119 105/81 106/201 114/10 120/302       SEEN-BY: 123/130 128/187 129/14 142/104 153/757 7715 154/10 30 50       SEEN-BY: 154/110 700 201/0 203/0 218/700 840 220/10 20 30 90 221/1       SEEN-BY: 221/6 360 226/18 30 44 50 227/114 229/110 134 206 300 307       SEEN-BY: 229/317 400 426 428 470 664 700 705 240/5832 266/512 280/5003       SEEN-BY: 291/111 301/1 320/119 219 319 2119 322/757 762 326/101 335/364       SEEN-BY: 341/66 342/200 396/45 423/81 460/58 633/280 712/848 902/26       SEEN-BY: 2320/0 105 304 3634/12 5020/400 5075/35       PATH: 2320/105 154/10 221/6 1 320/219 229/426           |
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