Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
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498 FOUS30 KWBC 040056 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 856 PM EDT Fri May 3 2024 Day 1 Valid 01Z Sat May 04 2024 - 12Z Sat May 04 2024 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL PLAINS, SOUTHEAST, AND IN THE VICINITY OF WEST VIRGINIA... ...Southeast Texas... Convection across central TX, or any outflows emanating from such which could spur new convection, is likely to track/propagate east- southeast to southeast across portions of south-central TX towards the Middle TX Coast to the south of Houston/Galveston. This area has been much drier than areas farther north and the 18z HREF is not emphatic about the potential. This update drops the risk level across portions of TX to a Marginal Risk, as a precaution, should another convection complex form and develop some isolated to widely scattered flash flood potential not seen through the whole of the mesoscale guidance suite, whose performance has been okay but not stellar lately. ...Central Plains... The Marginal Risk area in Kansas has been shifted south in deference to the 18z HREF guidance, which in itself seems a bit far to the north based on radar reflectivity trends. A squall line is moving across the state and there`s some evidence in the mesoscale guidance and radar reflectivity that some cell mergers with activity that forms in advance of the feature would raise some flash flood potential. There`s always a chance that the southwest flank of the line could slow and allow for cell training, so the Marginal Risk accounts for such potential. ...Southeast... An MCV from earlier activity across TX and LA is making a turn east-northeast and gaining some convection while doing so. In case a warm advection convective band or cell mergers with less organized convection to its northeast occurs, extended the Marginal Risk to the southwest to account for such potential. ...In and near West Virginia... Active convection with heavy rainfall is expected to shift somewhat eastward into the Blue Ridge mountains of western VA before fading or forward propagating thereafter. The previous Marginal Risk has been shifted somewhat eastward as a result. Roth Day 2 Valid 12Z Sat May 04 2024 - 12Z Sun May 05 2024 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER MUCH OF CENTRAL AND NORTH TEXAS... ...2030Z Update... ...Southern Plains... Model guidance has shifted south quite a bit with the most recent updates. The general consensus now is for storms to form along the dry line in West Texas, then develop upscale and towards the east in central Texas. As the storms develop, there will be cell mergers and other interactions, as well as possible training that could lead to local rainfall totals to 5 inches. Further, soils in this area have been saturated due to rainfall from thunderstorms as recently as yesterday. Thus, the Slight Risk area was expanded south to include much of central Texas. The surrounding Marginal was expanded further south to account for likely guidance changes prior to the event. Most of the flash flood producing rainfall is expected overnight Saturday night, continuing into Sunday morning. On the northern side of the Slight, what happens further south will be critical as to how much rain falls along the Red River. Since this area too has nearly saturated soils, the northern side of the Slight was trimmed less on the north side than it was expanded on the south. Nonetheless, the northern side of the Slight has more uncertainty. ...Sacramento Valley of California... The inherited Marginal was shifted a few miles west to move the area off of the higher elevations of the Sierras. Unseasonably cold air associated with an upper level low will keep most of the precipitation at the higher elevations and passes through the Sierras as snow. Any rainfall at the lower elevations will be confined to the valley. The event is a strong one for this time of year, and so abundance of moisture still keeps the area as a low end flash flooding threat. Wegman ...Previous Discussion... Height falls aloft ejecting eastward from the Southern Rockies and the presence of a dryline over West Texas will foster an environment for thunderstorms capable of producing heavy rainfall by later in the day on Saturday that persists into Saturday night/early Sunday morning. Precipitable water values will have increased to nearly 1,5 inches...some 2 to 2.5 standardized anomalies greater than climatology...over portions of central and west central Texas by 00Z Sunday in response to a period of southeasterly flow off of the Gulf of Mexico. Consensus of model guidance QPF in the range of 1 to 3 inches seems reasonable...although the UKMET was a notable outlier. ...Northern Sierra Nevada Foothills... A fairly robust IVT pulse will slide down the west coast with southwesterly flow aimed orthogonally to the northern and central Sierra`s by Saturday. Higher elevations will be greeted with more snow, but the adjacent foothills will remain warm enough to benefit from all rainfall. Rates will be borderline overall, but the prospects for over 1" of precip has grown in the past succession of runs with the ensemble bias corrected guidance now upwards of 2" now forecast within the elevations below 8000` MSL, falling mainly in a span of 8-12 hours. The threat is on the lower end of MRGL. Maintained continuity from previous forecast and will assess whether it needs adjusting, or removal pending future trends in guidance. Bann Day 3 Valid 12Z Sun May 05 2024 - 12Z Mon May 06 2024 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM SOUTHERN MISSOURI TO NEAR THE UPPER TEXAS COAST... ...2030Z Update... As the guidance has shifted southward on Saturday, the same has occurred on Sunday. Storms will likely be ongoing in portions of east Texas at the start of the period Sunday morning, and will continue pushing east into the morning. It appears likely that there will be an east-west-oriented boundary along which storms will be training on the south end of a more progressive line of storms. There is inherent and typical uncertainty with where that line will set up, especially with recent large southward shifts in the guidance. Thus, to cover the large changes in the guidance, as well as very recent and ongoing heavy rain across southeast Texas, the Slight was expanded well south of inherited, and likely will be upped at least to a higher-end Slight in Texas if the current shifts in the guidance hold, with a distinct possibility for a Moderate upgrade with hopefully agreeable CAMs guidance. For the Ozarks region, significant uncertainty also exists, as the area will be on the northern side of the strong shortwave trough driving all of the convective activity. Much like much of the lower Mississippi and points west, the area also has average to above average soil moisture, which in turn will support the development of flash flooding given enough rainfall. The northern side of the storm complexes often get cut off from the Gulf moisture supporting them in favor of storms further south and closer to the Gulf. This increases the uncertainty in the forecast for this area. For now, guidance spread has led to an expansion of the Slight into south-central Missouri and north-central Arkansas...as well as the surrounding Marginal as far east as Alabama. These are likely to change due to the highly variable forecasts of convection for this area. Wegman ...Previous Discussion... The potential for excessive rainfall makes its way eastward on Sunday in association with a closed low aloft and a cold front at the surface. Model QPF was not as heavy as forecast on Day 2 as shifting low level flow results in weaker low level moisture flux convergence along the front. Despite model QPF generally being 2 inches or less...opted for a Slight Risk given the wet antecedent conditions over portions of eastern Texas and eastern Oklahoma. Bann Day 1 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt Day 2 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/98epoints.txt Day 3 threat area: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/99epoints.txt