RSS Mesoscale Discussions from Storm Prediction Center

SPC Jun 4, 2026 1300 UTC Day 1 Convective Outlook

SPC 1300Z Day 1 Outlook
      
Day 1 Outlook Image
Day 1 Convective Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0658 AM CDT Thu Jun 04 2026

Valid 041300Z - 051200Z

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS THIS AFTERNOON AND
EVENING OVER PORTIONS OF THE NORTHERN PLAINS....

...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms capable of large to very large hail and
damaging winds are possible today from parts of the northern High
Plains across northern Nebraska and much of South Dakota. More
isolated occurrences of large hail and damaging winds appear
possible farther south across portions of the central Plains.

...MT/Dakotas/MN...
Fast zonal flow is present today over the northern U.S, with a
shortwave trough now over western MT approaching the northern High
Plains.  Easterly low-level winds have transported 50s dewpoints
westward into southeast MT/northeast WY, where daytime heating and
increasing large-scale ascent will lead to scattered afternoon
thunderstorms.  Coverage of storms is not expected to be very high,
but those cells that can develop will likely be supercells capable
of large hail and damaging wind gusts.  Storms will spread into the 
central Dakotas through the evening with a continued severe threat.

Farther east, a surface boundary is forecast to extend from
south-central SD into central MN.  Strong heating in this corridor
will promote scattered thunderstorms after 20z.  Forecast soundings
suggest an environment favorable for hail and damaging winds in the
strongest cells.

...KS/NE/IA...
A weak upper trough has emerged from the central/southern High
Plains overnight and is now moving across western KS.  Radar loops
show an MCV near Hays KS that will track into southeast NE and
western IA later today.  A combination of low-level convergence,
daytime heating, and the affects of the MCV will lead to scattered
afternoon thunderstorms from northeast KS into IA.  CAPE values of
2000-3000 J/kg are expected, along with sufficient deep-layer shear
for multicell or perhaps supercell storm structures.  The potential
exists for hail and damaging wind gusts in the stronger cells this
evening.  An upgrade to SLGT was considered, but the shield of
clouds/precip in vicinity of the MCV limits confidence in heating
and the area of greatest concern at this time.

..Hart/Kerr.. 06/04/2026

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SPC Jun 4, 2026 Day 4-8 Severe Weather Outlook

Day 4-8 Outlook
      
Day 4-8 Outlook Image
Day 4-8 Convective Outlook  
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0352 AM CDT Thu Jun 04 2026

Valid 071200Z - 121200Z

...DISCUSSION...
...Day4/Sunday...

A short-wave trough initially from the lee of the Canadian Rockies
into the northern Rockies is forecast to lift northeast into central
Canada, while a lower-latitude wave moves through the central and
southern Plains toward the MS Valley. Elsewhere, a short-wave trough
will traverse the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. At the surface, a cold
front will slowly advance across the northern Plains, while a
separate cold front moves south through the Mid-Atlantic.

The strongest mid/upper-level winds and associated vertical shear
will lag the northern Plains cold front to the west; however, the
presence of moderate to strong instability within the warm sector
may compensate, yielding the potential for an organized
severe-weather event Sunday afternoon and evening. Elsewhere,
isolated to widely scattered severe storms appear possible along the
Mid-Atlantic cold front, as well as across lower elevations of
central and southern Plains into Ozark Plateau, in association with
the mid-level trough.


...Day5/Monday...

Ensemble mean and deterministic model solutions are in good
agreement in suggesting that a mid-level trough will move onto the
West Coast, with a downstream belt of stronger winds remaining
confined to the Interior West. At the surface, a cold front
initially from the ND-MN Red River Valley into central High Plains
will weaken through the day in response to falling pressures over
the Rockies. Isolated severe storms appear possible along the
segment of the front immediately east of a surface low over western
KS where strong instability is forecast. However, generally weak
forcing for ascent and marginal vertical shear may limit the
potential for an organized severe-weather episode. 


...Day6/Tuesday...

The ensemble mean and deterministic model solutions remain in
relatively good agreement in depicting the continued amplification
of the mid-level trough over the western U.S., with a belt of
stronger winds aloft overspreading the northern Plains. At the
surface, there is reasonably good ensemble clustering in the
location of a deepening lee cyclone over the northern High Plains,
with a lee trough extending through the central into southern High
Plains. While large-scale forcing for ascent remains somewhat
nebulous, low-level convergence in the vicinity of the surface low
and lee trough should be sufficient to initiate afternoon/evening
thunderstorms within an environment favoring the potential for a
concentrated area of severe weather.


...Day7-8/Wednesday and Thursday...

The ensemble mean solutions suggest the main trough becoming
quasi-stationary over the Interior West. There is considerably more
spread in the deterministic models, especially by Thursday, in the
location and geometry of the mid-level trough, as well as any
smaller-scale disturbances embedded within it. At the surface, there
is fairly large spread in ensemble member low pressure positions,
and the location of any associated boundaries. In general, it
appears that some severe-weather threat will continue across the
northern Plains; however, confidence in a more specific details is
currently too low to delineate an area.

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