Thunderstorms to boom over nation's midsection as air masses collide

The middle of the nation experienced a brief reprieve from widespread severe weather late this week. However, thunderstorms are poised to flare up over the weekend as a mass of hot air floods into the atmosphere over the Plains and Midwest.

Milder air from the Pacific Ocean and western U.S. has surged eastward across the nation in the wake of heavy thunderstorms that swept across the Midwest and drenched the East Coast on the last day of April. Where sunshine returned, temperatures climbed to near-average levels over the Midwest and multiple records were tied or broken over the south-central U.S..

This buildup of warmth is not likely to sit well with the atmosphere as a new wave of chilly air is forecast to sweep southward in stages this weekend and early next week.

With the aid of a strong jet stream overhead and the action of the cooler air forcing the warm air to rise, there is the potential for towering thunderstorms to erupt across the central High Plains and Ohio valley into Saturday night.

Locations from St. Louis to Pittsburgh could all see rain and thunderstorms during this time frame.

The storms could affect cities such as Denver to Dodge City, Kansas into Saturday night along the brim of swelling heat over the nation's heartland.

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"We often see severe thunderstorms erupt on the northern rim of heat," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Bill Deger said.

Storms that fire on Saturday will continue eastward on Sunday, with new storms firing up in the mid-Atlantic into Sunday evening.

Sunday's storms could affect cities such as Louisville, Kentucky, Columbus, Ohio, and Washington D.C..

That northern rim is often the weakest part of a dome of high pressure, so storms tend to form there rather than in the middle of the fair weather system. This is often the location where the air aloft begins to cool, which aids in thunderstorm development.

"We had storms erupt on the rim of the heat on Wednesday and Thursday over the interior Northwest, so it's not surprising to expect more storms farther east where the northern rim ends up being later this weekend," Deger explained.

The main threats with the storms over the central U.S. are expected to be hail, strong wind gusts and flash flooding during Saturday night and Sunday.

A second eruption of thunderstorms is anticipated farther to the south over the Plains and the lower Mississippi Valley late Monday to Tuesday night. The storms will ignite as cooler air presses across the Midwest then the Northeast early next week.

The storms early next week might roll through Kansas City, Missouri, Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Little Rock, Arkansas. All of the usual threats, including large hail and strong wind gusts to flash flooding and perhaps tornadoes, are possible with these storms on Monday and Tuesday.

It is possible the setup allows large complexes of thunderstorms to form, which can lead not only to a swath of torrential rain and flooding but also the potential for a long-lived high wind event that can move along for several hundred miles. This phenomenon is known as a derecho.

Systems such as this are more common from the late spring to the middle of summer, but a destructive derecho unleashed wind damage over portions of the southern Plains and lower Mississippi Valley Tuesday night and early Wednesday morning, and these dangerous storm complexes can occur earlier in the spring when the ingredients align, typically along the boundary of heat to the south and cooler air to the north.

Most thunderstorm complexes fall below the criteria for a derecho, which must bring nearly continuous reports of wind gusts of 58 mph or greater over a distance of at least 240 miles.

Additional outbursts of severe weather are possible near the boundary between the heat hanging on in the Southwest and the buildup and return of cool air in the Northeast later next week.

2020 is off to a wild start with severe weather in what has become the deadliest tornado season since 2011, in which 1,894 twisters touched down. As of May 1, 589 preliminary tornadoes have been reported and more than 3,800 damaging wind reports have been filed this year by the Storm Prediction Center (SPC). Tornadoes have claimed 73 lives in 2020, the SPC reports.

AccuWeather will continue to provide updates on the upcoming severe weather as meteorologists analyze new information.

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