Severe Storm Risk - Muir Beach, CA
Severe Storm Risk
-There is a Marginal Severe Storm Risk for your location. Continue reading for today's outlook from the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center. -------------------- National Severe Storm Outlook THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS MUCH OF COASTAL CALIFORNIA AND PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL VALLEY SUMMARY An isolated risk for severe/damaging gusts and perhaps a brief tornado will exist today into tonight along much of the California Coast and portions of the Central Valley. California A shallow band of pre-frontal convection may continue to pose a threat for locally severe/damaging winds (especially across higher terrain/ridgetops) and perhaps a brief tornado this morning across parts of coastal southern CA. This activity is being supported by strong low-level warm advection and large-scale ascent associated with an enhanced mid/upper-level jet. Current expectations are for this activity to continue moving eastward through the afternoon across the remainder of coastal southern CA in a strongly sheared environment. However, various NAM/RAP forecast soundings across this area suggest that even with low 60s surface dewpoints and modest/filtered daytime heating, the overall severe threat will likely remain isolated due to poor lapse rates aloft and limited boundary-layer instability. Reference Mesoscale Discussion 2269 for more details on the near-term severe threat across southern CA. Additional rounds of convection are expected later this evening and overnight into early Thursday morning over portions of northern/central CA, as multiple mid-level shortwave troughs embedded within persistent large-scale upper troughing over the eastern Pacific overspread these areas. One such shortwave trough is forecast to advance over coastal central CA and vicinity around 25/00-06Z this evening, with cool temperatures aloft (less than -20C at 500 mb) supporting weak MUCAPE. Both low-level and deep-layer shear are expected to gradually increase this evening as the shortwave trough approaches, with some updraft organization possible. Strong to locally severe winds and a brief tornado or two appear possible with this activity, but uncertainty is still substantial whether sufficient instability will be present to support surface-based thunderstorms. A stronger mid-level shortwave trough will move east-northeastward from the eastern Pacific and approach the northern CA Coast by 12Z Thursday morning, along with a deepening surface low and attendant cold front. A 70-80+ kt mid-level jet will accompany this shortwave trough, along with a 50-60 kt south-southwesterly low-level jet. A broken band of low-topped thunderstorms will likely develop in association with this shortwave trough along/ahead of the front, and overspread coastal portions of northern/central CA late tonight through early Thursday morning (25/06-12Z). A strongly sheared environment and weak but sufficient MLCAPE may exist to support at least an isolated threat for severe/damaging winds and a tornado or two as this activity spreads inland through the end of the period. Still, the overall severe threat should be tempered by the lack of stronger instability. Finally, some chance for low-topped/mini supercells may exist late this afternoon/evening across parts of the Central Valley of CA. If these thunderstorms can develop and be sustained, they could pose a threat for both damaging winds and a brief tornado. But, confidence in this scenario occurring remains rather low.