GEORGIA — Strong to severe thunderstorms may ramp up this afternoon across parts of central Georgia, with the highest concern focused along and south of a stationary front. Based on the latest guidance and radar trends, supercells are considered likely in the most favorable corridor, and the primary threat may be damaging straight-line winds capable of producing localized gusts in the 50 to 70 mph range.
A noon radar snapshot shows a developing band of storms extending from near the Alabama line toward the Atlanta metro and east toward the Augusta area, signaling that storms are already organizing along the boundary. As heating continues into the afternoon, storms in and near this band could intensify quickly, especially where individual cells can rotate and become discrete supercells.
When Strongest Storms Are Most Likely
The main window for stronger storms appears to be between noon and 6 PM, when daytime heating and the stationary front combine to increase instability and lift. Forecasters note that the environment along and south of the boundary may support rotating updrafts, which is why supercells are on the table rather than only a line of general thunderstorms.
If storms remain more clustered, the biggest impacts could come in bursts as stronger segments move through. If storms can break into isolated or semi-isolated cells, the risk for brief rotation and localized higher-end wind gusts can increase.
Primary Threat: Damaging Winds Up to 70 MPH
Damaging winds are considered the greatest threat with the strongest storms today. Gusts in the 50–70 mph range can down tree limbs, topple weaker trees, and cause spotty power outages, particularly where soils are saturated or where winds hit in repeated bursts…