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Sunday, July 2, 2023

Convective Outlook Valid for Today and Tomorrow

Regional Impacts:

 

Today

NB/Labrador: A chance of non-severe thundershowers. Gusty winds, small hail and downpours are possible in Labrador.

NS/PEI/NL: None.

 

Tonight

NL: A chance of non-severe thundershowers.

NS/NB/PEI/Labrador: None.

 

Monday

Labrador: A chance of non-severe thundershowers.  

NB/NS/PEI/NL: None

 

Convective Discussion:

A warm and humid air mass prevails throughout the region. An upper trough and a supportive vorticity centre will enable surface based thunderstorms over Labrador today. MUCAPE values of 500-1000 J/kg are expected over Labrador however shear values are near 10 kts will limit the thunderstorm impacts to non-severe. Gusty winds to 70 km/h and small hail (relatively low freezing level) are possible. PWAT values near 40 mm maintain the downpour threat that has been in existence for the last few days in areas where the cells are training or slow moving. There is a slight risk of an embedded thundershower over extreme northwestern New Brunswick today.

 

Thunderstorm outlook for today:

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tonight:

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tomorrow:

Saturday, July 1, 2023

Convective Outlook Valid for Today and Tomorrow

Regional Impacts:

 

Today

NB/NS/PEI/NL/Labrador: A chance of non-severe thundershowers.

 

Tonight

Labrador: A chance of non-severe thundershowers.

NS/NB/PEI/NL: None

 

Sunday

NB/Labrador: A chance of non-severe thundershowers  

NS/PEI/NL: None

 

Convective Discussion:

 

A warm and humid air mass prevails throughout the region. A 30kt southwesterly LLJ and a supportive vorticity centre is giving thundershowers over areas of Newfoundland today. Generally MLCAPE values range from 500-1000J/kg however a clear lack of a trigger or a supportive upper jet should allow the main threat to be downpours. PWAT values near 40 mm maintain the downpour threat that has been in existence for the last few days in areas where the cells are training or slow moving.

 

Thunderstorm outlook for today:

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tonight

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tomorrow

Friday, June 30, 2023

Convective Outlook Valid for Today and Tomorrow

Regional Impacts

NB: Isolated non-severe thunderstorms possible over the northern half of NB this afternoon, rainfall up to 10 mm.

NS & PEI: A few embedded thunderstorms with locally heavy downpours of 15 mm,  possibly up to 30 mm over eastern NS.

NL: Isolated thunderstorms over southeastern Labrador, and Northern peninsula, and possibly over central portions of the island,  rainfall up to 10 mm.

 

Convective Discussion…

Warm and humid air mass prevails throughout the region, with the exception of Labrador where dewpoint temperatures are less than 15. The main area of interest today is along a 30kt southwesterly LLJ which is pumping moisture into an axis running from south of Halifax through eastern regions of mainland NS, and then to the northeastward to the Northern peninsula of NF. A deep instability layer above 850mb with tops extending to 9-10 km is analysed on the Shearwater sounding, generally MUCAPE values range from 500-1000J/kg. The LLJ and the presence of areas of vertical velocities at 700mb will likely enhance rainfall processes over the previously mentioned area today. A 75kt southwesterly upper jet also will also support some of the convective cells that forms. Over southern NB and western-most regions of NS, warming is expected in the mid-levels today which will prevent low level instability from extending vertically.

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Today

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tonight

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tomorrow

 

Thursday, June 29, 2023

Convective Outlook Valid for Today, Tonight, and Tomorrow

Regional Impacts

NB: Organized thunderstorms possible over NW NB this afternoon, 0 to 1 cm hail and locally heavy rain of 20 to 40 mm possible.

NS & PEI: Isolated thundershowers with locally heavy downpours of 10 to 15 mm.

NL: Slight chance for an embedded thundershower over southern Labrador, locally heavy downpours are the main risk.

 

Convective Discussion…

The main area of interest today is along the NB/Maine border. A shortwave currently over western Maine will slowly push east, which will provide ample lift for convective activity this afternoon. A 100 kt southerly 250mb jet sitting over western NB will aid in the development of organized thunderstorms, pending the clearing of low level cloud over northwestern NB. Models have been under-forecasting cloud cover here, and if things do not clear out this afternoon, thunderstorm activity will be limited. If cloud does begin to clear this afternoon, surface based CAPE values may exceed 1000 J/kg; this in combination with 20-30 kts of 0-6 km shear will support the development of organized thunderstorms. The main threats would be 0 to 1 cm hail, locally heavy downpours of 20 to 40 mm, and convective gusts up to 70 km/h. The risk here will be entirely dependant on whether or not the low level cloud clears out enough to allow surface temperatures to rise into the low to mid twenties, allowing for surface based convection to initiate.

 

A few lightning strikes are also possible over parts of NS and PEI today, as a 55 kt 500mb jet sits over the region. This will allow for some isolated embedded convection, with locally heavy downpours being the main threat. This risk will remain overnight before the jet begins to push east tomorrow morning.

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Today

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tonight

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tomorrow

Copp

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Convective Outlook Valid for Today, Tonight, and Tomorrow

Regional Impacts

NS and NB: Embedded thundershowers today with locally heavy rain, 20 to 40 mm along Atlantic shores of NS and south-central NB.

NL: Isolated embedded thundershowers possible over central Labrador this afternoon, local rainfall amounts 15 to 25 mm.

PEI: Isolated thundershowers possible this afternoon, locally heavy rain of 10 to 15 mm.

 

Convective Discussion…

As an area of high pressure sits east of Newfoundland, a quasi-stationary trough extends from the US east coast through the St. Lawrence river valley, and into northern Labrador. This pattern in combination with a 40 kt low level jet is supplying ample moisture over the next few days across Atlantic Canada. MUCAPE values of 500 to 750 J/kg and 40 kts of 0-6 km shear will allow for some sustained embedded convection today along Atlantic shores of NS, as well as in south-central NB. The main threat with these storms will be locally heavy rainfall, with 20 to 40 mm possible in areas of convection. This threat will persist overnight along the south shore of NS.

 

A weak shortwave will move into southern Labrador this afternoon, providing ample lift for some organized convection between Labrador City and Goose Bay with 40 kts of 0-6 km shear. The main threat with these thundershowers will be locally heavy rain, with 15 to 25 mm possible.

 

Tomorrow, a shortwave will approach northern NB from the west. This, in combination with 20-30 kts of 0-6 km shear and surface-based CAPE values of 1000-1250 J/kg will allow for a line of organized convection to form over northern Maine. Main threats with these thunderstorms will be 0 to 1 cm hail, and locally heavy rain of 20 to 40 mm. There is still some model disagreement on the speed at which this shortwave will approach NB, so the risk area may need to be extended to the southeast as models gain a better handle on the system.

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Today

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tonight

 

Thunderstorm Outlook for Tomorrow

 

Copp