• MESO: Mesoscale Discussion 0749

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/107 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun May 17 18:12:40 2026
    ACUS11 KWNS 171812
    SWOMCD
    SPC MCD 171811=20
    MNZ000-IAZ000-NEZ000-SDZ000-172015-

    Mesoscale Discussion 0749
    NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
    0111 PM CDT Sun May 17 2026

    Areas affected...southeast SD...northeast NE...northwest IA...and
    southwest MN

    Concerning...Severe potential...Tornado Watch likely=20

    Valid 171811Z - 172015Z

    Probability of Watch Issuance...95 percent

    SUMMARY...Severe potential will increase over the next couple of
    hours across southeast South Dakota and northeast Nebraska into
    adjacent portions of Minnesota and Iowa. A substantial all-hazards
    severe risk is expected by mid-afternoon into this evening. Very
    large hail to 3.5 inch diameter, strong tornadoes, and intense wind
    gusts to 90 mph appear likely. A tornado watch will likely be issued
    by 19z to 20z.

    DISCUSSION...A cluster of elevated convection is ongoing across
    north-central NE ahead of the surface cold front. The downstream
    airmass is quickly destabilizing as rich boundary-layer moisture
    (mid to upper 60s F dewpoints) spreads north and west amid strong
    heating. Immediately downstream from the ongoing thunderstorm
    cluster, latest mesoanalysis indicates weakening midlevel capping.
    This is supported by increasing cumulus from Brown to Knox and
    Antelope Counties in NE in the vicinity of a quasi-stationary
    boundary/warm front. Increasing midlevel southwesterly flow is
    evident in the past couple of hours on region VWP. This trend should
    continue, with additional strengthening of low-level flow in
    response to surface pressure falls. Vertically veering wind profiles
    with 40+ kt effective shear magnitudes within moderate to strong
    instability (by mid/late afternoon) will support robust supercell
    development within the warm sector on the nose of the midlevel dry
    slot across the northeast NE vicinity. Discrete supercells will pose
    a risk for very large hail, strong tornadoes, and damaging wind
    gusts.=20

    Additional linear convection is expected along the cold front,
    particularly across SD into southern MN. Given favorable low-level
    shear, line-embedded cells/mesovortices will pose a tornado risk
    even in linear convection. As linear convection organizes and a
    low-level jet increases toward late afternoon into the evening, a
    substantial damaging wind risk may evolve.

    ..Leitman/Mosier.. 05/17/2026

    ...Please see https://urldefense.com/v3/__http://www.spc.noaa.gov__;!!DZ3fj= g!8DGEirsKqi4rRBAU8vyH-B32pnMotumEeRbpj3vhF5iwnC-dt5eda9OnsZkZsEjX1YwWz3551= GXOq1zEF8SrOs7jAkI$ for graphic product...

    ATTN...WFO...DMX...FSD...OAX...GID...LBF...UNR...

    LAT...LON 41509588 41419680 41489786 41779924 42209988 42570005
    42989990 43169978 43529913 44229752 44329681 44329625
    44229587 43959537 43419522 42589536 41979555 41509588=20

    MOST PROBABLE PEAK TORNADO INTENSITY...120-145 MPH
    MOST PROBABLE PEAK WIND GUST...75-90 MPH
    MOST PROBABLE PEAK HAIL SIZE...2.00-3.50 IN


    =3D =3D =3D
    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 (1:2320/107)