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Weather Alert Day: Few storms Tuesday night followed by severe risk Wednesday and Friday

The ABC 17 Stormtrack Weather Team has issued a Weather Alert Day for Tuesday night through Wednesday, and again on Friday for the potential of severe storms that could produce strong winds and hail.

SETUP

Temperatures reached the mid-80s on Tuesday, with plenty of instability and moisture for storms to feed off of and sustain into the night.

It's been a quiet night so far, but two distinct areas could bring the potential of storms overnight. Storms could develop along the front across southern Nebraska and northwest Missouri. This could pose a threat for damaging winds and large hail across northwest Missouri after midnight. Storms ahead of a dryline to our southwest could work into southern Missouri overnight, also posing a hail and wind risk. Mid-Missouri could end up being sandwiched in between, limiting the overall severe potential overnight.

This is the first of a two-day setup for us, as another chance for severe storms is forecast for Wednesday.

Another threat of severe weather is developing on Friday. After a break from thunderstorm activity on Thursday, thanks to upper-level ridging, another long-wave trough is set to enter the plains from the northern Rockies.

FUTURETRACK

The best sources of convergence for storm development will be a warm front well north of us and a dry line just west of us. The dry line is where dry and warm air meet, and often creates rising air that could be a trigger for storms on Tuesday evening, much like it was on Monday. This is what will likely trigger storms in Kansas and Oklahoma, but the dry line is less aided by upper-level disturbances this far north.

Storms will weaken below severe limits late in the night. Scattered showers and storms develop on Wednesday morning. This could hamper another round of strong-to-severe storms on Wednesday afternoon and evening. Still, some recovery of the atmosphere appears possible, and we will be monitoring for storms capable of severe hazards.

Friday's setup is less certain, but an area of surface low pressure is forecast to lift a warm front north of the region, boosting storm energy and moisture once again. Given wind profiles, support for severe weather will exist south of the warm front and east of the cold front. Timing and expectations are being drawn with a broad brush for now, but details will be added to this blog when they become clear.

HAZARDS

The Storm Prediction Center has issued a 2/5 risk for severe storms on Tuesday and Wednesday, indicating isolated to scattered severe storms are possible.

Severe storms will be capable of at least quarter-size hail, 60+ mph winds, and a few tornadoes both Tuesday and Wednesday. These threats are likely to be repeated to some extent on Friday. Make sure you have our ABC 17 Stormtrack Weather App for the latest updates to the forecast. A NOAA weather radio is also useful for receiving geotargeted alerts when cell service is poor or storms move through at night.

Article Topic Follows: Weather

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Jessica Hafner

Chief Meteorologist Jessica Hafner returned to ABC 17 News in 2019 following a stint as a meteorologist and traffic reporter in St. Louis. She is a 2012 graduate of Northern Illinois University and holds the AMS Certified Broadcast Meteorologist designation.

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