
According to the National Meteorological Service (NWS), a dangerous and extended thermal wave continues to be burned.
In her latest prediction, NWS Prediction Center, Maryland, warned that daily high temperatures would rise well to 90 and 100 years by the end of the month. Comparison of danger is not small until no relief overnight, which the agency says that it will be “particularly dangerous for those who do not have adequate cooling or hydration”.
NWS noted that the Heat wave is likely to break daily temperature records throughout the week. Florida is expected to see a maximum of nearly 100 ° F today, while the northeast can reach the middle to upper 90 years.
165 million under thermal alerts
The intensive Heat wave continues to affect the huge line of the Earth, with ABC News reporting that more than 165 million Americans are in thermal alerts that stretch from Nebraska to New Hampshire and Florida.
From New Orleans to St. Louis is in place extreme thermal warning, while thermal indices of up to 116 ° F.
Cities in Florida like Jacksonville and Orlando can also see temperatures similar to a feeling of 116 ° F.
In the northeast, thermal advice is active from Pennsylvania to Maine, where indices could range from 95 ° F to 105 ° F.
Other parts of the Midwest and South can see the values of the thermal index between 100 ° F and 110 ° F.
According to the intelligence socket, Heat Dome is expected to gradually weaken and the weekend moves south. Most country returns to typical summer heat levels and some regions can even trend slightly below the diameter.
Storm threats and lightning flood risks are expanding through plains and southwest
According to the NWS weather forecast, the combination of shortwave energy, unusual humidity and atmospheric instability is expected to generate in the afternoon and evening storms through the northern and middle plains today.
It is assumed that the storm will start in the eastern Montana before merging into the mesoscale convective system (MCS), which will advance on Wednesday morning through Dakotas, Wyoming, Nebraska and Iowa.
NWS issued a slight risk (level 2 out of 5) for serious storms in affected areas, warning of wind damage and hail. In addition, there is at least 15% chance of excessive precipitation, which increases concerns about the localized flash flood.
Storms will continue on Wednesday on the Midwest
The storm system is expected to intensify on Wednesday in the Midwest, where moisture and instability remain. NWS placed parts of Iowy, Missouri, Illinois and Western Indiana at a slight risk of excessive collision, which quoted the potential for severe collision and lightning floods.
Monzoonal moisture controls southwest flood threat
Meanwhile, the short -wave energy rotating around the western edge of the dominant upper ridge is expected to continue to pull tropical moisture to the southwest.
This formula will lead to the distraction of isolated daily storms today, with lightning floods, especially in vulnerable areas such as burns scars in New Mexico.
Looking at Wednesday, the cold front will help run another storm activity through the middle and southern plains. As a result, NWS has given a slight risk of excessive precipitation for: East Colorado, Southwest Kansas, Northeast New Mexico, Texas and Oklahoma Panhandles.
(Tagstotranslate) US heatwave