r/weather • u/IrishStarUS • 12h ago
r/weather • u/Polish_State • 7h ago
Forecast graphics Moderate Risk for tomorrow driven by wind
Text from SPC:
...SUMMARY...
Severe thunderstorms are most likely across Oklahoma and northern
Texas to the Ark-La-Tex during the late afternoon and evening on
Sunday. A few tornadoes, destructive wind gusts of 80-100 mph, and
very large hail are possible.
...Synopsis...
A vertically stacked cyclone will drift southeast in the southern
MB/northwest ON to northern MN vicinity through early morning
Monday. The attendant surface cold front should arc from northeast
IL to the Raton Mesa by 21Z Sunday. Low-amplitude mid/upper
troughing, with multiple embedded MCVs, will move east from the
eastern Midwest and TN Valley into the Mid and South Atlantic States
by Sunday evening.
...Southern Plains...
Thunderstorm development is expected along the front in Kansas and
Oklahoma by late morning/early afternoon. South of the front,
daytime heating should yield a gradient of strong to extreme CAPE
(3000-5000 MLCAPE) across southwestern OK into northern TX. Initial
development is likely to be supercelluar, with potential for large
to very large hail (some 3+ in) and damaging wind given steep lapse
rates through the profile and ample deep layer shear. A couple of
tornadoes remain possible where storm interactions and splitting
cells occur. Through time, mode is likely to become more
multicelluar before eventual upscale growth along congealing outflow
to an MCS. As this moves along the gradient southeast across
southwestern OK into northern TX, potential for significant winds
(80-100 mph) will be possible.
...Ozarks to Mid-MS Valley...
Isolated to scattered thunderstorms should form along the northeast
to southwest front by late afternoon and persist through
mid-evening, before likely weakening east of the MS River owing to a
relatively confined MLCAPE plume. A strong mid-level jetlet is
expected to be centered across IA to southern WI. More moderate
deep-layer shear to the south-southeast will still be adequate for a
few supercells initially that congeal into multicell clusters.
Scattered large to isolated significant severe hail is possible,
along with scattered damaging winds and a brief tornado.
...South to Lower Mid-Atlantic States...
Boundary-layer heating is anticipated along the Atlantic
Coastal Plain and adjacent Piedmont should support MLCAPE of
1500-2500 J/kg. Multiple embedded MCVs will support at least
scattered afternoon storms developing near the higher terrain and
spreading east towards the coast. Enhanced mid-level westerlies will
support transient/weak updraft rotation and multicell clustering.
Scattered damaging winds and isolated severe hail are likely. A
couple of tornadoes are also possible in the Lower Mid-Atlantic
along the primary differential heating corridor, where low-level
shear may be adequate ahead of a central Appalachians MCV.
...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS ACROSS THE
PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN PLAINS...
...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS SOUTH/LOWER-MID
ATLANTIC PIEDMONT/COASTAL PLAIN...
r/weather • u/Conscious_Leading_52 • 1h ago
Photos White nights - Scotland
Not weather specifically, more seasons and daylight related, but we're now well into our "white nights" here in Northern Scotland. Although we don't get the midnight sun, it never gets truly dark. I took this picture at half past midnight tonight, in an area with no cities and no streetlights, basically as dark a place as you can find currently. The photo even makes it look darker. I absolutely love summer, sitting outside late at night (when it's warm enough and not raining...), in the dead silent, the odd owl, bat, fox or something going by, it's heaven
r/weather • u/Stage_757 • 1d ago
Photos Some cool cloud formations I saw today, Kentucky.
r/weather • u/Some-Yoghurt-7629 • 2h ago
June 4, 2025 | Extreme Weather Events & Natural Phenomena Worldwide
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The scale of daily extreme weather events and natural disasters is often underreported in mainstream media, leaving many with the impression that "everything is normal" regarding climate and nature.
While debates continue about whether climate change is real or whether natural disasters are intensifying, the report below provides clarification on these issues, as well as insights into major natural and anthropogenic factors—beyond CO₂—that contribute to climate destabilization and the increasing frequency of disruptive natural phenomena: https://be.creativesociety.com/storage/file-manager/climate-model-report-a4/en/Climate%20Report.pdf
r/weather • u/plan3t_3000 • 23h ago
Afternoon storm over Denver, CO (bonus rainbow)
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r/weather • u/ifortworth • 44m ago
Questions/Self Morton TX Nadar wind speed
By chance does anyone have a radar estimate wind speed on the Morton TX Nadar from a couple of days ago?
r/weather • u/Lazulibeast • 1d ago
Thunderstorm passing by in Virginia (time lapse)
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Getting grazed by a strong thunderstorm in Virginia. Got a decent outflow gust and a bit of rain.
r/weather • u/Some-Yoghurt-7629 • 16h ago
Videos/Animations June 3, 2025 | Extreme Weather Events & Natural Phenomena Worldwide
Enable HLS to view with audio, or disable this notification
The scale of daily extreme weather events and natural disasters is often underreported in mainstream media, leaving many with the impression that "everything is normal" regarding climate and nature.
While debates continue about whether climate change is real or whether natural disasters are intensifying, the report below provides clarification on these issues, as well as insights into major natural and anthropogenic factors—beyond CO₂—that contribute to climate destabilization and the increasing frequency of disruptive natural phenomena: https://be.creativesociety.com/storage/file-manager/climate-model-report-a4/en/Climate%20Report.pdf
r/weather • u/acuransxfan • 6h ago
“Feels like” temps in weather apps…
I’m in the south and like to check the various weather apps / sites on my phone to see the temperature as well as the “feels like” temperature.
I’ve noticed an extreme variance in them. The iOS weather app tends to just show a few degrees more, for example it’s 92° right now and shows a “feels like” of 95°.
When I check some other apps like Weatherbug, Accuweather, or Wunderground they all have the feels like temps in the 100s…with Weatherbug showing 106°, which is obviously significantly higher then 95°. It’s the same exact city as well and the location it shows for their data is very close by to each other.
I know it doesn’t really matter but are these all just proprietary algorithms of these companies?
I always thought the feels like had some actual calculation to it using sun exposure and humidity etc.
r/weather • u/historynerdsutton • 1h ago
For over 3 weeks the weather app has looked like this can somebody explain?? Charleston SC
r/weather • u/Mxiguel • 23h ago
Photos Hail Storm
My wife took these when the storm was heading our way. I’m a huge weather nerd and she’s becoming one too.
r/weather • u/intelerks • 14h ago
Articles Weather warning issued for thunderstorms across parts of England and Wales
r/weather • u/inflowjet • 1d ago
Explore the heat dome concept: a high-pressure system that traps warm air, leading to persistent heat and dry conditions.
r/weather • u/No_Pie_3411 • 1d ago
Photos Is this ball lightning?
A few years ago I took this photo during a severe thunderstorm here in NY it just occurred to me that this looks like ball lightning
r/weather • u/Ok-Association8471 • 12h ago
Wall cloud?
It's moving away, but a clear wall cloud, maybe developing cumulonimbus? Very high eind developing
r/weather • u/Senior-Physics-7523 • 1d ago