Through the weekend and into Monday an upper level trough is expected to migrate east out of California and into the Plains. By Wednesday it will swing NE through the Plains and Mississippi Valley while taking on a negative tilt. A strong surface low is expected to form ahead of it and draw warm moist air northward and present a severe weather threat across much of the southeast. The Storm Prediction Center has a 15% risk up for parts of Louisiana and most of the midsouth at Day 6, showing this should be another potent risk.
There are still a number of questions to answer though. The first is exactly where will have the greatest risk, as the current depictions from ensembles and operational models is to have the surface low farther north into Iowa as compared to this past event where it cut through Oklahoma and Missouri. That low track would likely shift the highest risk regions to the north vs our last event. Timing is also a question, with the idea being generally Wednesday but we do not know if we have a daytime or a nighttime threat yet.
At this point, I’m just trying to let y’all know of the potential. Today, I just want to look at the big picture of the ingredients to come together to start building situational awareness ahead of the event. It is too early to be concerned with details yet.