- Severe storms are possible in the Plains, Midwest and Northeast midweek.
- Damaging winds, large hail and some tornadoes are all potential threats.
- Localized flash flooding is also a concern.
The severe storm threat is expected to become more expansive in parts of the Plains, Midwest and Northeast into the second half of the week. These storms could produce damaging wind gusts, large hail and at least some tornadoes.
Isolated severe storms are expected on Tuesday from the upper Midwest into the Central and Southern Plains.
By Wednesday, a frontal system draped from the Northeast into the Central Plains is likely to produce a more widespread threat of severe weather. That threat will continue into Thursday in the Plains and Midwest as an area of low pressure forms along the front and tracks eastward.
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There could also be areas of flash flooding develop in the nation's midsection.
Forecast
Wednesday-Wednesday Night
Scattered severe storms are possible along the cold front from interior parts of New England into upstate New York, northern and western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio. Damaging wind gusts are the most likely threat from any severe storms in this area, but a couple of tornadoes are possible, especially from eastern New York into interior New England.
A separate area of severe storms is expected to erupt from the Central Plains southwestward into the Texas Panhandle during the afternoon and evening. Some of those storms could pack very large hail, damaging winds and a few tornadoes.
There might be an overnight threat of significant damaging wind gusts as a complex of storms race eastward across southern Nebraska and northern Kansas.
Thursday-Thursday Night
A leftover complex of strong storms could be ongoing early Thursday in parts of eastern Kansas and Missouri.
More storms are likely to develop later in the day into the evening hours from the mid-Mississippi Valley southwestward into south-central and southeast Kansas, much of Oklahoma and western Texas.
NOAA's Storm Prediction Center says supercell thunderstorms might produce large to giant hail from south-central and southeast Kansas into central Oklahoma and southwest Missouri. Those storms could also have a tornado threat.
Flash flooding from heavy rainfall is possible in many of the same areas at risk for severe weather, especially from Oklahoma into the Ozarks and mid-Mississippi Valley.
Some potential for severe storms might persist ahead of this frontal system into Friday, but it's too early for details. Early indications are that parts of the Southern Plains could have the greatest threat of severe weather.
The Weather Company’s primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, IBM.
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May 26, 2021 at 12:03AM
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