This afternoon had the potential to be fairly active in the San Antonio area with a cold front moving through the area and 3000 to 4000 J/Kg of CAPE. There was weak convection along the frontal boundary in the northern part of the CWA at the start of the “forecast period”. These thunderstorms remained north of the San Antonio Airport which was the site of an airshow. As the afternoon progressed it remained generally quiet for the CWA with the exception of a thunderstorm moving into the western portion of the CWA.
This aforementioned thunderstorm was handled extremely well by both OCTANE CTC and lightning cast. When CTC had begun to pick up, lightning cast quickly elevated lightning probabilities to above 50%. When both products began to highlight the area of concern, it was roughly 25 to 30 minutes before the first lightning strike was reported. This is highlighted in the GIF inserted below.
After the forecast period ended this thunderstorm finally moved southeast into an area where we were providing DSS. There was a similar relationship with the lightning cast probabilities as it moved into the area of concern. When it crossed the 50% threshold it was 35 minutes until the first strike. There was a weird artifact with V2 lightningcast where it was on an upward trend but briefly dropped before immediately increasing again. If we can continue to get these 25 to 35 minute lead times on lightning, especially for outdoor events, it will greatly increase the service we could provide to our partners and the public.
While cloud cover and model performance made it hard to use Synthetic GEOXO imagery. It was still correctly showing the cold front in roughly the correct location. There wasn’t a large change of moisture across the front, so it was very hard to identify in the 0.91 channel. This imagery still provides us another tool to look at, in order to identify areas of concerns for the afternoon.
-Blizzard
