Strong to severe convection fired along a northwest to southeast oriented boundary situated along and to the east of the I-44 corridor. This remnant boundary served as a focus for the convection as synoptic-scale ascent moved into the region ahead of an upper-level trough and roughly in the poleward-exit region of an upper-level jet streak. The convective band stretched south into northeastern Texas and eventually developed upscale into a relatively large MCS stretching from Arkansas into Missouri. Meanwhile, further to the west more isolated elevated convection formed in the late afternoon in the Texas panhandle immediately ahead of a 500 hPa vorticity maximum. As daytime heating was lost, the cores of theses storms weakened leaving behind a region of more stratiform type precipitation that was working its way across southern Oklahoma.
Today should serve as a reasonable preview for tomorrow as a similar situation appears to be in the cards. Two areas of precipitation will impact Oklahoma. One of these areas which will be associated with potentially severe convection will be situated along the Red River valley and should remain clear of the operations area. However, a second region of initially elevated convection, should develop in western Oklahoma ahead of of an ejecting shortwave trough. This region is likely to evolve into a stratiform region of precipitation as it eventually moves into the operations region.