Message Area
Casually read the BBS message area using an easy to use interface. Messages are categorized exactly like they are on the BBS. You may post new messages or reply to existing messages!

You are not logged in. Login here for full access privileges.

Previous Message | Next Message | Back to National Weather Network  <--  <--- Return to Home Page
   Networked Database  National Weather Network   [524 / 900] RSS
 From   To   Subject   Date/Time 
Message   COD Weather Processor    wx-storm   HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion   July 24, 2019
 12:47 AM *  

This is a multi-part message in MIME format...

------------=_1563929247-118394-78
Content-Type: text/plain

FOUS30 KWBC 240047
QPFERD

Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
845 PM EDT Tue Jul 23 2019

Day 1
Valid 01Z Wed Jul 24 2019 - 12Z Wed Jul 24 2019

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS WESTERN
MONTANA, SOUTH-CENTRAL ARIZONA, THE SOUTHERN MID ATLANTIC,
SOUTHEAST, & CENTRAL GULF COASTAL REGION...

...Southern Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Central Gulf Coast...
Rainfall rates were beginning to decrease from the Southern
Mid-Atlantic Region to the Southeast U.S. and Gulf Coast region
with loss of solar heating as the main precipitation band
continues to move eastward.  Main change for this ERO was to
remove the Slight Risk area and tighten the remaining Marginal
Risk area. Before long, a majority of the precipitation will have
moved off shore and only isolated to widely scattered coverage of
heavy rainfall will linger.

...Southern California...Southwest into the Southern Rockies...
A closed upper high is forecast to remain in place in the vicinity
of the Four Corners through the night.  This will favor the
persistence of above average monsoonal pw values...as much as 1.2
to 1.6 inches over the Desert Southwest  which was nearly 2
standard deviations above the climatological mean for late July.
With clearing skies, scattered monsoonal convection did develop
and did produce isolated heavy totals and isolated runoff issues
possible, even into the valleys of southern AZ due to easterly 700
hPa flow.  The HREF continued to show probabilities of 1"+
rainfall amounts into the overnight hours from the Peninsular
Range of Southern California...through the Mogollon Rim of Arizona
into southern New Mexico and far Southwest Texas...with the area
from north central New Mexico into south central Colorado also
having some probabilities of 1"+ rainfall amounts.

...Northern Great Basin into the Northern Rockies...
No changes were made to the on-going Slight Risk area over western
MT or the surrounding Marginal Risk area extending from eastern
Washington and northeast Oregon into western Montana.  An upper
trough is forecast to progress inland across these areas later
tonight and into the early morning hours on Wednesday.  ML CAPE
has probably already peaked.  Model QPFs remain fairly
modest...even from High Resolution CAMS...but radar showed
scattered convection likely being aided by well-defined upper
difluence expected ahead of mid-level height falls over the
Northern Great Basin into the Northern Rockies.  Still think
isolated totals of 1-2" are possible, which could occur in one
hour given the ample moisture available.

Bann


Day 2
Valid 12Z Wed Jul 24 2019 - 12Z Thu Jul 25 2019

...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
OF FLORIDA AND GEORGIA AS WELL AS THE FOUR CORNERS REGION...

Update...The monsoonal moisture streaming into the Southwest will
generate scattered convection across the Four Corner region,
favoring areas of higher terrain. Based on some of the model
trends, increased QPF across portions of Arizona, as well as
southern California. These adjustments largely occurred within the
current area of Marginal Risk fore excessive rainfall, therefore
very little adjustments were made to the outlook itself.

The best moisture convergence, lift and instability across the
southeastern U.S. is forecast to be over northern Florida/southern
Georgia along the stalled frontal boundary. The QPF lowered about
0.25 inch between Tallahassee and Tampa front he previous
issuance, however areal averages remain 1 to 2+ inches across
northern Florida. The southern bound of the Marginal Risk was
expanded southward toward Tampa Bay to compliment the new QPF.

...Northern FL/Southeastern GA...
A cold front will become stalled across the region and off the
southeast coast by early Wednesday. With a decent moisture and
instability gradient present combined with mid-level impulses
riding atop the aforementioned surface boundary, convection will
likely develop with efficient rain makers. Precipitable water
values of 2+ inches will be transported by 15-25 knot
southwesterly winds. Marginal MUCAPE values of 1000+ J/kg are
expected across this region Wednesday afternoon. Within the upper
levels, the jet streak to the north will slowly sink south
allowing the right entrance region to become positioned over
southern GA and northern FL, promoting additional lift. Mean wind
around 20 knots from the southwest will become aligned with
corfidi vectors in terms of both speed and magnitude for a period
of time Wednesday afternoon/evening. This will likely result in
shower/thunderstorm activity training across portions of the
northeast Gulf Coast region along the FL coast between Tampa and
Tallahassee. Given this, there is the potential for isolated flash
flooding with high flash flood guidance taken into account.
Therefore, the Marginal Risk was maintained.

...Four Corners...
Mid/low-level monsoonal flow around the persistent Four Corners
high will provide moisture with instability and upslope flow to
promote convective initiation along higher terrain of the Four
Corners states Wednesday afternoon/evening. Continued light mean
flow will mean slow storm motions and the potential for the
activity to spread off the terrain into the plains. Therefore, the
Marginal Risk was maintained across portions of AZ and the Slot
Canyon region of southern UT. Southerly flow up the eastern sides
of the CO/NM Rockies will again provide moisture to storms firing
over the high terrain, so the Marginal Risk remains centered on
the San Juan mountains.


Pagano/Campbell

Day 3
Valid 12Z Thu Jul 25 2019 - 12Z Fri Jul 26 2019

...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS
OF FLORIDA AND GEORGIA AS WELL AS THE FOUR CORNERS REGION...

Update...The most notable change to the QPF is in the Gulf
coast/Southeast region. The trailing end of the stationary front
is closer to the Gulf Coast, which in turn kept the QPF northward
near central Gulf Coast than the previous forecast. A few models
show an area of max QPF of 1 to 3+ inches near/south of New
Orleans, which resulted in the updated QPF of 0.50 to 1 inch near
the Mississippi Delta with an approximately 1.5 inch max offshore.
The middle section of the frontal boundary and associated QPF will
be a bit further offshore thus the back edge of the QPF axis will
hug the coast.

The trough tracking across the divide will provide additional lift
for the convection firing along the Central and Southern Rockies;
increasing the precipitation along this area approximately 0.10 to
0.50 in the highest terrain. The Marginal Risk had minimal tweaks
to account for the QPF adjustment near the outer bounds.


...Northern FL/Southeastern GA...
Rinse and repeat from Day 2 (Wednesday/Wednesday Night) with
respect to the stationary boundary which remains draped across
northern Florida (through Thursday night) which is the continued
focus for shower/thunderstorm activity.  Given this pattern has
shown little movement from the previous 24 hours, any
precipitation that did fall on Day 2 may allow soils to become
slightly more sensitive to additional rainfall.  However, these
sandy soils can take quite a bit of rain with soil recovery quick
to occur.  Regardless, with a continual feed of high precipitable
water across this region, lingering instability and mid-level
impulses moving atop the surface front, expect a couple additional
rounds of precipitation across this region. Areal average
precipitation within this region will range from around 0.75 to
over 1.25 inches. Therefore, decided to introduce a Marginal Risk
in basically the same location as seen on Day 2.

...Four Corners...
Mid/low-level monsoonal flow will persist across the Four Corners
region Thursday afternoon into the overnight as the mid-level
high/ridging provides moisture and impulses which when combined
with instability and upslope flow will promote convective
initiation along higher terrain. Continued light mean flow will
mean slow storm motions and the potential for the activity to
spread off the terrain into the plains. A slight difference with
respect to the synoptic pattern as observed on Day 2, a trough
crossing the northern Rockies will promote additional lift,
especially across the higher terrain in CO/NM.  Therefore expect
higher QPF totals and thus introduced a large Marginal Risk area
across this region. In addition have a Marginal Risk across a
portion of northern AZ into the higher terrain of south UT.

Pagano/Campbell


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...


$$




------------=_1563929247-118394-78
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.
------------=_1563929247-118394-78--

--- SBBSecho 3.07-Linux
 * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)
  Show ANSI Codes | Hide BBCodes | Show Color Codes | Hide Encoding | Hide HTML Tags | Show Routing
Previous Message | Next Message | Back to National Weather Network  <--  <--- Return to Home Page

VADV-PHP
Execution Time: 0.0882 seconds

If you experience any problems with this website or need help, contact the webmaster.
VADV-PHP Copyright © 2002-2024 Steve Winn, Aspect Technologies. All Rights Reserved.
Virtual Advanced Copyright © 1995-1997 Roland De Graaf.
v2.0.140505

Warning: Unknown: open(c:\Sessions\sess_062epi7d849ej9mq9rjmfoqem4, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (c:\Sessions) in Unknown on line 0 PHP Warning: session_start(): open(c:\Sessions\sess_062epi7d849ej9mq9rjmfoqem4, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in D:\wc5\http\public\VADV\include\common.inc.php on line 45 PHP Warning: Unknown: open(c:\Sessions\sess_062epi7d849ej9mq9rjmfoqem4, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in Unknown on line 0 PHP Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (c:\Sessions) in Unknown on line 0