Severe Weather (Again): Thursday Night
East Texas through southeastern Louisiana at risk Thursday night into Friday. Mississippi coast through the Panhandle gets into the action on Friday.
Severe season continues with Thursday night and Friday morning looking a lot more interesting. I currently think the main risk is going to be gusty winds in thunderstorms. Large hail is also a concern, with steep lapse rates and instability through the hail growth region. The tornado risk looks limited, but not impossible, as the convection should remain elevated for most of the state of Louisiana into Mississippi. The fly in the ointment for tornadoes is realized early on Friday morning, as it looks like there will be enough instability at the surface to get surface based storms. With the shear available, this brings a tornado risk for the Florida Parishes and the Southshore.
On Friday, the dynamics start to fade over the northern Gulf Coast but instability will be present for surface based storms.
Big picture, on Thursday a strong shortwave will come east out of the southern Rockies. As it moves out of the mountains, a surface low will form on the lee side (east side) of the Rockies and track east along with it.
Image from pivotalweather.com. Annotations by Jacob Caddell. This shows the 850 mb (low-level) winds from the 3km NAM run at 00z on 3/16.
Low levels juice the rest of the column, and with steep lapse rates (over 7 C/km) for this part of the world, you get a decent amount (1000 J/kg) MUCAPE for those elevated thunderstorms to work with. In addition, there will be enough shear through the column to provide for organization of these elevated updrafts and potential for them to rotate.
Both images taken from pivotalweather.com with annotations by Jacob Caddell. This is just to show where those lapse rates and shear will be setting up.
I do want to discuss the tornado threat. It does appear to be dampen by the elevation nature of the storms but the low-level dynamics are absolutely rocking with a strengthening veering wind from the surface. The hodograph from FV3 sounding looks like absolutely trouble in the bottom 3km, where convection won’t really be working through. This is why I doubt many tornadoes spin up on Thursday even with the face ripping 305 0-1 km Storm Relative Helicity.
The thing is, as we get closer to sunrise and the warm air keeps getting pushed into southern Louisiana, there will be a window for tornado potential.