Tornado Threat Forecast

Tornado Threat Forecast: April 21-27, 2014

Today we resume regular updates of the Tornado Threat Forecast every Monday and Thursday! As we have done for the past two years, the regular updates will be twice per week until things start getting quiet again in the later parts of summer. There will be a break from these forecasts during our storm chase expedition (or “chasecation”) in the back half of May, at which time daily updates of how our chasecation is progressing will be posted instead.

1-3 Day
20140421_tornado_forecast1-3
Monday

Northeastern Texas, southeastern Oklahoma southwestern Arkansas — TORNADO RANGE: 0-2 — CONFIDENCE: High
Expected Tornado Hotspot: None
Pros: Moderate instability, decent/good directional shear
Cons: Weak speed shear, winds not that backed at the surface, no strong upper-level dynamics, mediocre mid-level lapse rates

Tuesday

No tornadoes expected.

Wednesday

Central and southern Plains — TORNADO RANGE: 0-2 — CONFIDENCE: Normal
Expected Tornado Hotspot: None
Pros: Strong directional shear, good speed shear, decent upper-level dynamics and height falls
Cons: Low to moderate surface instability, limited moisture leading to very high LCLs

4-7 Day
20140421_tornado_forecast4-7
Thursday

Mid-Mississippi Valley — TORNADO RANGE: 0-1 — CONFIDENCE: Normal
Expected Tornado Hotspot: None
Pros: Good upper-level dynamics, decent/good speed shear
Cons: Low instability, limited directional shear, possible capping issues, mostly linear storm mode due to unidirectional shear aloft

Friday

No tornadoes expected.

Saturday

Southern Plains — TORNADO RANGE: 3-8 — CONFIDENCE: Low
Expected Tornado Hotspot: Oklahoma, southern Kansas
Pros: Moderate/high instability, strong directional shear, good speed shear
Cons: Best upper-level dynamics lag behind storm initiation, upper-level winds becoming more southerly in the overnight hours

Sunday

Southeastern and east-central Plains, southern/mid Mississippi Valley — TORNADO RANGE: 2-6 — CONFIDENCE: Low
Expected Tornado Hotspot: Southeastern Kansas through northeastern Texas
Pros: Decent/good directional shear, good speed shear, strong upper-level dynamics, good storm coverage
Cons: Instability concerns in areas with the best wind profiles, concerns about progression of the system, upper-level flow could be less favorable, surface low could weaken and/or become more strung out

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Operational Meteorologist at WeatherBug (Earth Networks). See full bio.

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