Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
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249
FOUS30 KWBC 290059
QPFERD

Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
859 PM EDT Fri Jun 28 2024

Day 1
Valid 01Z Sat Jun 29 2024 - 12Z Sat Jun 29 2024


...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FROM EASTERN KANSAS
INTO THE MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TONIGHT...

...01Z Update...
Local radar shows backbuilding convection centered near a slow-
moving wave over eastern Kansas, and near the intersection of a
cold front sliding southeast through the Missouri Valley and a warm
front extending southeast across Missouri. These storms are being
fueled by a deep moisture pool (PWs ~2 inches), fed by southerly
low level inflow. The hi-res guidance members which have a
reasonable handle on the current conditions, including the 12Z ARW2
and recent runs of the HRRR, indicate some additional backbuilding
before cells begin to slowly train to the southeast during the
overnight hours. The result is a northwest to southeast axis of
heavy accumulations from eastern Kansas into western Missouri.
These moisture-robbing storms along with more progressive flow to
the north will likely lessen the potential for slow-moving, heavy-
rainfall producers further to the north. Therefore, trimmed away
some of the Slight Risk, but maintained a Marginal Risk further
northeast through the mid Mississippi Valley into the Great Lakes.

Elsewhere, expanded the Marginal Risk across eastern Arizona and
western New Mexico, where scattered storms and an isolated threat
for flash flooding will continue before storms diminish with the
loss of daytime heating.

Pereira


Day 2
Valid 12Z Sat Jun 29 2024 - 12Z Sun Jun 30 2024

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
THE LOWER GREAT LAKES AND UPSTATE NEW YORK AS WELL AS NORTHEAST NEW
MEXICO...

...2000Z Update...

The main change to the Day 2 ERO was to add a Slight Risk into
northeastern New Mexico. A stalling/meandering front in that area
will combine with PWs increasing to above the 90th or 95th
percentile. Hi-res models are focusing on that area for convection
with high rain rates, and thus the 12Z HREF has probabilities of
30-40 percent chance of exceeding FFG, with higher probabilities to
70 percent of exceeding 10-year ARI. This all warrants a Slight
Risk that was coordinated with the Albuquerque WFO.

The reasoning below remains valid for the Marginal to Slight Risks
in the northeastern quadrant of the U.S., with some expansion of
the southern Slight Risk northward into far southwestern New York
and eastward into more of Pennsylvania, per recent model trends
(especially the hi-res). Continued to hold off on any embedded
Slight Risk in the south-central Plains/Mississippi Valley due to
considerable model spread in the highest QPF.

Tate

...Previous Discussion...

Coverage of showers and thunderstorms should be increasing over
portions of the Ohio Valley prior to the start of the Day 2 outlook
period at 29/12Z. Precipitable water values look to be approaching
2 inches over parts of the Ohio Valley will be in place by the
time height falls from a sharpening mid-level trough approaching
from Canada arrives. The broad-scale ascent afforded by the
approaching shortwave...the deep moisture and wet bulb zero values
at or above 10 kft suggest some intense downpours are possible.
With at least some risk of cell training and perhaps some
interaction with terrain...felt an upgrade to Slight Risk was
needed...although the antecedent conditions may mitigate the
flooding potential somewhat. A second Slight Risk was introduced
across portions of upstate New York which was more hydrologic
sensitivity than the Ohio Valley given recent rains. Concern for
excessive rainfall extends southward and westward from these Slight
Risk areas along/near a cold front making its way into the
Tennessee Valley/Central Plains and southern Rockies. Precipitable
water values in the 2 to 2.25 inch range should be pooling along
the front from the eastern seaboard as far west as Arkansas and
Oklahoma by 30/00Z. Model guidance shows a lot of spread in this
region and a Marginal Risk was maintained due to the potential for
any cells that form to be efficient rain makers.

Bann

Day 3
Valid 12Z Sun Jun 30 2024 - 12Z Mon Jul 01 2024

...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OVER PORTIONS OF THE EASTERN SEABOARD,
SOUTHWEST U.S., CENTRAL PLAINS, AND NORTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

...2000Z Update...

A Marginal Risk area was added to central Kansas. This area is
arising as a concern especially in the hi-res models that go out
that far. Storms are likely to be ongoing Sunday morning,
propagating east from Saturday`s southern High Plains convection.
This will be on the cusp of the instability gradient, a typically
favored location for storms with high rain rates. It is possible
the risk area will shift around in placement in future model cycles
if models vary.

No significant changes in forecast reasoning for the other
Marginal Risk areas. The Four Corners Marginal was expanded north a
bit to be consistent with recent model guidance.

Tate

...Previous Discussion...

...Eastern U.S...
Showers and thunderstorms capable of producing heavy to possibly
excessive rainfall will persist along and ahead of a progressive
front associated with a northern stream trough. Current guidance
continues to focus the heaviest rainfall amounts and rates over
portions of the Mid-Atlantic seaboard at the time of maximum
instability extending into portions of the coastal Carolinas.
Overall the upper dynamics should keep cells moving but with
precipitable water values approaching 2 inches along/near the
front...flooding is possible in areas of poor drainage and urban
areas.

...Southwest U.S...
Moisture begins to get drawn northward from Mexico on the western
side of a sprawling mid-level high over the Southern Plains.
Isolated to widely scattered late afternoon and evening convection
has the potential to produce locally heavy rainfall as the sub-
cloud layer moistens up in response to precipitable water values
over 1.5 inches crossing the border into southern Arizona by early
evening.

...Plains of western North Dakota and eastern Montana...
A mid- level trough will be moving out of the Northwestern US and
emerging from the northern Rockies by afternoon helping to focus
late day convection. Any convection that forms during the day
should encounter deeper moisture over North Dakota by the
evening...leading to a threat of excessive rainfall. Model guidance
does show increasing moisture transport into the region by a
strengthening low level jet during the evening with at least some
concern for convection to persist into the night given the model
shear profile.

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