Blizzards, dust storms, fires, floods, thunderstorms and tornadoes were the result of very strong back-to-back negatively tilted shortwave troughs through the eastern half of the U.S. From Texas to Wisconsin, New York to Florida, severe wind gusts, large hail, and deadly tornadoes were recorded. The hardest hit states during the three-day severe weather outbreak (as far as thunderstorm hazards are concerned) were Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Alabama.
The GOES-16 ABI water vapor RGB animation below (courtesy of College of Dupage) shows the development and occlusion of the low-pressure system on 3/14-15, evidenced by the beautiful spiral vortex in the middle of the country. On its heels, another shortwave trough further south spawned several rounds of intense thunderstorms, tapping into the rich Gulf moisture on 3/15. This latter system would then menace the eastern U.S. on 3/16, particularly Ohio, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New York.

The NOAA/CIMSS ProbSevere system of models are used to provide forecasters automated guidance to convective weather threats in the short term, generally 0-60 minutes. While there are plenty of examples to look at, I will focus on some strong tornadic supercells in southern Mississippi.
LightningCast, a trained AI/ML model, uses solely GOES-R ABI data to predict next-hour lightning. It is intended to aid forecasters in providing impact-based decision support (IDSS) to partners, but also to provide general convective initiation guidance. In the line of quickly developing storms from far southwest Mississippi, zipping down into eastern Louisiana, LightningCast was able to give anywhere from 15 to 30 minutes of lead time to lightning initiation (measured from the yellow 30% contour in the animation below). Considering the rapid evolution of these cells, and the overall busy situation of the day, this could really help provide forecasters with some advanced notice of sustained convection in a dangerous environment.
Above: The background is the GOES-16 day-cloud-phase-distinction RGB. The foreground blue-to-red pixels is the GOES-16 GLM flash-extent density. The labeled contours are predictions made by LightningCast.
Once these supercells in Louisiana and southern Mississippi matured, the ProbSevere IntenseStormNet provides an estimate of “intensity” using an image-based AI/ML model. Specifically, it uses images of the 0.64 µm reflectance, 10.3 µm brightness temperature, and GLM flash-extent density to make predictions. While the IntenseStormNet could be used as a satellite-only model for severe weather guidance, it has been incorporated into ProbSevere v3, providing better satellite information at the mature phase of storm development.
Below, in south-central Mississippi, the poor village of Tylertown was hit twice by tornadic supercells in the span of 40 minutes, causing devastating damage. We can see > 90% probabilities from the IntenseStormNet and a string of tornado reports following the line of recent tornado reports. The robust overshooting tops, cold-U/above-anvil cirrus plume signatures, and strong GLM flash cores all contributed to the high probabilities.
Storm chaser Tanner Charles shows the velocity couplets from the Jackson, MS radar passing over very nearly the same location.
ProbSevere version 3 is an upgrade to the operational version 2, and uses more radar, satellite, lightning, and short-term NWP data to better predict severe weather hazards such as wind, hail, and tornadoes.

In the first supercell that hit Tylertown, the probability of tornado was 68% at the time of the first NWS tornado warning. This is an extreme value for ProbTor v3. Unsurprisingly, the low-level MRMS AzShear (i.e., low-level rotation) was the top contributor, with the environmental shear, low-level mean wind (closely correlated with 0-1 km shear), and mid-level rotation the next top-contributing predictors. The storm’s flash rate, IntenseStormNet probability, and MLCAPE from the HRRR model provided additional boosts to the probability.

After this first tornadic supercell hit Tylertown, it would produce major tornadoes in Taylorsville, MS, and would go on to produce tornadoes in western Alabama, nearly 200 miles away from Tylertown! The secondary maximum in the ProbTor v3 probability (top center panel, red line) occurred before and during the tornado in western Alabama. Note also how the PTv3 increased before PTv2 as the storm was developing (compare red lines in top left and top center panels), a trend we’ve observed in a number of tornadic storms. ProbSevere v3 is slated to be operational in NOAA this summer (see paper here for more details on the models).

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