The 12z GEFS from 4/7/22, showing where each ensemble member has the resulting surface low from all this upper level mess and how strong the low is modeled to be.
Big spread. Can’t worry about details on individual model runs yet but I’d like to look at what the general idea would result in each day.
Monday and Tuesday:
The basic story is there will be minor disturbances coming out of the southern Rockies that will provide some lift across the southern plains and central/eastern Texas. Southerly flow will push warm and moist air out of the gulf into Texas and Oklahoma. As the afternoon progresses, a dry line will form and push east. This will provide the surface level forcing to lead to thunderstorm formation. Given the shear and instability that should be there, these storms will have the potential to become severe.
Tuesday would likely get the severe risk farther east, potentially into western Arkansas and Louisiana. Additionally, we will need to watch that southern disturbance as it could bring a severe threat farther south than expectations from the SPC currently, with threats to SE Texas and SW Louisiana. Still very early to lock that in, but something I’m going to be watching for.
Wednesday:
The strong upper low over the Rockies begins to move east, and in response to the forcing from this a strong surface low will form somewhere in the western plains. This low pressure will move NE toward the Upper Mississippi Valley, and will drag a cold front behind it that will stretch all the way to the Gulf Coast. Ahead of this front there will be flow out of the south to continue to push warm air northward and provide a wide swath of instability from the Gulf Coast all the way into Missouri and Iowa. There will be enough shear to support severe weather all across these regions, so the potential for widespread severe weather will be there.
tl;dr version:
The SPC is going to earn their paychecks forecasting this mess. There will be severe potential Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday at least with potential Thursday as well but very high uncertainty on where and how intense on that part. The threat will not likely get into the southeastern United States until Wednesday, with Texas and Oklahoma enjoying three straight days of threats. On Monday and Tuesday, storms should fire along the dry line in Texas and Oklahoma and progress east into a warm airmass in central and eastern parts of Texas and Oklahoma. On Tuesday there is potential for the threat to materialize further south as well, with SE Texas and SW Louisiana potentially under the gun.
The confidence in a severe outbreak next week is high. The confidence on exactly when and where isn’t.