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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
COD Weather Processor | wx-storm | HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion |
July 15, 2019 10:43 PM * |
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This is a multi-part message in MIME format... ------------=_1563230633-51656-11475 Content-Type: text/plain FOUS30 KWBC 152243 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 642 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2019 Day 1 Valid 2242Z Mon Jul 15 2019 - 12Z Tue Jul 16 2019 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL TONIGHT OVER SOUTHERN ARKANSAS... ...Flash Flood risk associated with Barry... The main concern tonight will be a steady precipitation band expected to form over southern Arkansas. In the meantime, the flash flood threat appeared to be waning over southeast Texas. At 2230Z isolated thunderstorms were occurring in the vicinity of Houston where small scale outflows had collided. This should remain disorganized, and the deep layer ascent was becoming less favorable for rainfall as Barry continued to lift northward. The RAP forecasts mean low level convergence to develop eastward through Louisiana this evening, with winds relaxing over Texas and southwest Louisiana. We therefore removed the Moderate Risk area, but will maintain a Slight Risk in the hard hit areas with saturated ground and inundation occurring north of I-10 in Louisiana. Scattered outflow dominant thunderstorms will deliver a quick half inch of additional rainfall locally, but expect this activity to diminish in intensity and coverage throughout the evening, leading to eventually a quiet night in Louisiana. Attention then shifts squarely toward Arkansas, for the next nocturnal rain band expected to form within the convergent region south of Barry's circulation, where deep lift coincides with the instability axis. Models show a very strong signal for a focused rain band, and it may only affect a handful of counties, but some higher-end rain rates would be likely given the tropical environment. With training and a relative absence of outflow, expect hourly accumulations to push above 2 inches, with very isolated overnight totals in excess of 7 inches over southwest Arkansas per the hi-res model guidance. Suspect this event will begin toward 04-07Z, but sometimes these types of events start percolating early and then ramp up in intensity. Farther out from Barry toward the east, convection had been smaller in scope and more progressive this afternoon. We shrank the Slight Risk and Marginal Risk areas, but will maintain Slight Risk overnight arching along the instability gradient from eastern LA / western MS up toward southeast Missouri. ...Northern Plains into the Upper Mississippi Valley... A shortwave trough and seasonably unstable air mass will promote clusters of strong storms, particularly over parts of MN/WI this evening. Storm modes, steering flow, and T/Td spreads favor relatively progressive activity. Flash flood risk will be tied primarily to occasional cell mergers which boost rain efficiency, especially where rainfall last night had created wet soil conditions from southeast MN into western WI, promoting a high percentage of surface runoff from new rainfall. We trimmed back the Slight Risk over eastern Wisconsin where less intense convection had begun to remove instability. Most of the hi-res model QPF signal focuses back to the west this evening. We also narrowed the Marginal Risk area, but a few flash floods could occur in areas of strong thunderstorms stretching back toward the central High Plains, again with seasonably moist and unstable air, and relatively wet soil conditions. Burke Day 2 Valid 12Z Tue Jul 16 2019 - 12Z Wed Jul 17 2019 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL ARKANSAS WITH A SLIGHT RISK EXTENDING INTO THE OHIO VALLEY... ...Lower Mississippi Valley into the Southern Great Lakes... The remaining circulation of T.D. Barry will gradually lift northward through the MS VLY before becoming absorbed into the westerlies and opening late on day 2 and shearing off to the northeast. South and east of this circulation, the moisture plume will continue to channel from the Gulf Coast evidenced by higher PWATs of 1.5-2.5 standard deviations above the climo mean lifting from AR into MI. The channel will be tightened with the strengthening/impinging Subtropical ridge pressing west across the Southeast US, drawing additional moisture, but in a sense is drier relative to the deeper moisture closer to Barry. This channel will also be favoring the higher instability axis to the south, and an evolution similar to today across LA/TX is expected in AR/TN Tuesday. The combination of elevated MUCape and mid-level confluence to drive ascent will drive convective development with the potential for excessive rain rates through the afternoon. The strong convective elements are likely across AR where the greatest overlap of instability and PWAT combine, and HREF probabilities are high for 2"/hr through 18Z along with EC probabilities for 5". Guidance does differ in the exact location of the heaviest rainfall due to minor perturbations in the confluence band, but these types of rain rates on top of pre-conditioned soils due to antecedent heavy rain has prompted a MDT risk across portions of southern and central AR. Further north and east, the moisture axis will shift into the lower Great Lakes, but instability and PWAT anomalies will be somewhat lower. Still, this tropical airmass will support bands of convection with heavy rainfall from the TN VLY northward into the western OH VLY, and there is good model consensus for 1-3" of rainfall, with rates above 1"/hr likely at times. Flash flooding will be possible despite relatively drier antecedent conditions, and the SLGT risk has been extended NE towards Lake Erie due to pockets of FFG as low as 1.5"/3hr. ...Northern Plains... A slow moving frontal zone will drift in the vicinity Tuesday and Tuesday night, along which ripples of mid-level energy will waver the positioning due to subtle waves of low pressure developing in response. At the same time, ascent will be driven through at least weak jet coupling of the RRQ of a jet streak moving across northern MN, and the LFQ of a secondary jet streak lifting into the Central Rockies. Beneath these features, surface wave development in response to pressure falls will allow low-level winds to back, driving robust moist advection into the Plains on 25-40 kts of 850mb LLJ, especially after 17/00Z. PWATs climb to 1-2 standard deviations above the climatological normal, which in conjunction with MUCape rising above 2000 J/kg supports a highly favorable thermodynamic environment for convection and heavy rainfall. While the environment seems favorable for heavy rainfall, some guidance discrepancies still prevent enough confidence for a SLGT risk. The available HREF members vary considerably the first half of day 2 with heavy rainfall placement with convectively enhanced s/w MCSs moving atop the mid-level ridge. Additionally, some uncertainty persists as to the placement of the front itself, which will be the focus for the best rainfall/training potential. Despite high 14-day rainfall departures, and low FFG across SD, will maintain the inherited MRGL risk until better confidence can be achieved in where the highest rainfall and/or rainfall rates will locate. Gallina/Weiss Day 3 Valid 12Z Wed Jul 17 2019 - 12Z Thu Jul 18 2019 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM TENNESSEE THROUGH THE CENTRAL OHIO VALLEY AND INTO UPSTATE NEW YORK... ...Tennessee Valley northeast into Upstate New York... Moisture streaming ahead of what was once Tropical Storm Barry will lift into the Ohio Valley and northeast as the remnant center shears increasingly into the westerlies. Instability will be continue to be limited with only 500-1000 J/kg expected by 00z across much of the Ohio Valley, remaining south across TN/KY where values will be in the 2000-3000 J/kg range, slightly higher west where the moisture axis will separate from the instability axis by midday. Deep moisture will still be present with PWATs of 2" or more through the afternoon, before banking up against the terrain of the Appalachians and reducing below 1.5" early overnight Thursday. As such, any confluence is likely to produce isolated to scattered convection further north across E OH/W WV becoming more numerous in Central/Eastern KY and TN. Still, the ideal unidirectional steering flow will break toward a greater western component by evening supporting faster eastward propagation/cell motions and reducing extreme rainfall totals. Still, rates of 2"/hr are possible producing 1-3" of rainfall with locally higher amounts possible. FFG in TN is reasonable high, 2-3"/3hrs, but the potential for excessive rain rates in the tropical air mass supports the SLGT risk. Further north into Ohio and New York state, some enhanced ascent will be likely in the RRQ of a departing upper jet as tropical moisture streams northward on an 850mb LLJ of 25-35 kts. Instability will be limited as noted above, so convective initiation is is likely to be scattered, but mean steering flow along a residual front will support training of any convective cells. As such there is an increasing signal for a west to east QPF swath across the Great Lakes into the Hudson River Valley. The guidance is converging on this axis of heavier rainfall, and note an increase in ECENS probabilities for 6-h and 12-h rainfall. For these reasons and higher than normal recent rainfall across the area, especially in Ohio, have extended the SLGT risk northeast into New York state. ...Upper Midwest... Ascent through a weakly coupled jet structure and low-level convergence along a front will likely produce thunderstorm development on day 3. Weak mid-level impulses rotating atop a strengthening upper ridge to the south will further drive convective strength, with clusters of thunderstorms or MCSs possible, especially late in the evening and at night. These MCSs will be fueled by an intensifying 850mb southerly LLJ to 30+ kts which will veer cyclonically into MN/WI and drive anomalous PWATs reaching 2.5 standard deviations above the climo mean into those states. Intense moisture flux during this time will combine with ample instability noted by forecast MUCape of over 3000 J/kg to persist and intensify convection along the stationary front. Despite what may be rapid motion of this feature, some training combined with high likelihood for excessive rain rates of 2"/hr support an enhanced flash flood risk, especially if the heaviest rainfall can occur across regions with relatively lower FFG of 1.5"/3hr. While the dynamics and environment would support a SLGT risk, there remains considerably placement uncertainty into where the best overlap of forcing, and MCS track, will occur. The trend this afternoon has been for a subtle northward push of the max axis in the guidance, but there is still enough spread, including the 12Z/ECMWF which keeps the heaviest rainfall as far south as the MN/IA border, to prevent a SLGT risk at this time. However, it is likely that a SLGT risk will be needed as guidance converges onto a distinct solution closer in time to the forecast period. Gallina/Weiss Day 1 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.t... Day 2 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.t... Day 3 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.t... $$ ------------=_1563230633-51656-11475 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Disposition: inline Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7BIT = = = To unsubscribe from WX-STORM and you already have a login, go to https://lists.illinois.edu and use the "Unsubscribe" link. Otherwise email Chris Novy at cnovy@cox.net and ask to be removed from WX-STORM. ------------=_1563230633-51656-11475-- --- SBBSecho 3.07-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) |
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