


Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
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Issued by NWS
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825 FOUS30 KWBC 172032 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 432 PM EDT Tue Jun 17 2025 Day 1 Valid 16Z Tue Jun 17 2025 - 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE CENTRAL APPALACHIANS AND THE SOUTH-CENTRAL GREAT PLAINS... ...Central Appalachians to the Central Gulf Coast... Extreme thermodynamics expanding across the eastern CONUS will produce an environment favorable for widespread convection with heavy rainfall today and tonight. A broad Bermuda-type ridge centered off the southeast Atlantic coast will expand northwestward, while a shortwave trough persists over the Mississippi/Ohio Valleys. This will accelerate the SWly 850-500mb flow which contains multiple mid-level impulses that provide waves of enhanced ascent from the Central Gulf Coast through the Mid-Atlantic states. 12Z CAMs remain in good agreement on diurnal expansion of thunderstorms in a swath from Louisiana into Upstate NY, though poorly organized with bulk shear 20-25 kts and progressive to the northeast on 20-30 kts of mean layer wind. However, any storm will likely contain impressive rain rates in deep Gulf-sourced moisture with PWs up around 2" through this swath. Daily record high PW is possible at both OKX and PIT. This high PW and deep warm cloud depths of 13000-14000 ft will support high hourly rainfall, particularly around south-central PA that remains a favored area for QPF max today where a warm front is lifting. 12Z HREF neighborhood probs have 20-30% risk of of exceeding 2"/hr in south-central PA where a Moderate Risk persists. Sub- hourly rain rates of 3-4"/hr are possible in this environment. FFG is extremely compromised in parts of the central Appalachians with a Slight Risk remaining for eastern KY into northern PA. The Marginal Risk still extending all the way to the central Gulf Coast where isolated flash flooding is ongoing. ...South-Central Plains into the Midwest... 16Z Update... Shrank north side of Slight Risk to focus on organized convective activity over KS (where a Moderate Risk persists) with expansion downstream in OK and western MO. A potent shortwave shifts across the central Rockies this afternoon and amplifies sharply over the Plains this evening. This should enable vigorous terrain induced convection off the Front Range into WY with some organization as it shift east this evening. This will be after the ongoing activity centered on KS which is after a powerful MCS blew through last night. Impressive ascent downstream of this shortwave will impinge into a cold front draped across the Plains, resulting in surface low pressure development this evening as well. This will enhance ascent locally, especially as the LLJ ramps up to 40-50 kts, and is locally additionally enhanced downstream of the developing low pressure, especially in KS/OK. This LLJ will draw impressive thermodynamics northward reflected by PWs rising above 1.75 inches collocated with MUCAPE potentially exceeding 4000 J/kg. Where this LLJ converges both along its nose and into the wavering surface front, convection is expected to develop this evening, and then grow upscale and intensify tonight. The 12Z CAM consensus is for southern KS to be the MCS focus this evening with repeating heavy rain where earlier activity fell, raising the threat level. Weiss/Jackson Day 2 Valid 12Z Wed Jun 18 2025 - 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF MICHIGAN... ...Central States/Midwest... 21Z Update... Slight Risk introduced for the L.P. of Michigan. A shortwave trough lifts north from northern Missouri through the L.P. of Michigan Wednesday. This is in advance of the longer wave trough axis shifting east from the central Plains Wednesday and in the right entrance region of a SWly upper jet streak lingering over the northern Great Lakes through this time. These dynamics will allow the surface low pressure coincident with the shortwave to deepen through its track as it crosses northern Illinois and the L.P. of MI. This low will move along a baroclinic zone to the northeast, dragging its accompanying cold front east into the Midwest Wednesday afternoon and tracking over the Mid-South and Ohio Valleys Wednesday night, leading to two main swaths of heavy rain. The environment along the low track will support prolonged convergence/ascent as intensifying 850mb inflow from the Gulf will draw higher PWs (1.75 to 2") and with sufficient instability (MUCAPE around 1000 J/kg) northward. Within the deformation, the 850mb winds will lift a theta-e ridge northward and cyclonically around the low pressure, producing an axis of moderate to heavy rainfall within a modest TROWAL that will pivot northeast. The confidence on higher rain rates have increased with 12Z HREF neighborhood probabilities for 1"/hr rates now 40-60% over the central/lower L.P. through the afternoon (with 2-4" likely in the swath which warrants an introduction of a Slight Risk despite the typically higher FFGs in MI. Rates do ramp up over northern IL and especially over Chicago, so a Slight Risk could become warranted for the Chicago metro should trends continue to increase. Farther south along the front, instability is more robust with MUCAPE progged to be 1000-2000 J/kg, promoting scattered convection with embedded heavy rates particularly in the late afternoon/evening over southern Missouri and Arkansas east into Kentucky/Indiana. This area should also have ongoing activity from tonight which will further precondition soils. Given the progressive nature of the activity, the Marginal is maintained with expansion over OK/northeast TX/southern AR and central KY/TN. ...Mid-Atlantic into New England... Continued return flow around a Bermuda-type ridge off the Southeast coast will maintain broad southwesterly flow to pump elevated PWs northward into the Mid- Atlantic on Wednesday. PWs reach 2" Wednesday afternoon from the DC metro up through southern New England as a weak surface trough swings east over the Midwest. Despite the relatively isolated to scattered nature of convection expected, any of these torrential rain rates atop the more urban areas could cause isolated instances of flash flooding, and the Marginal Risk is maintained/expanded a bit into central PA where morning activity should be occurring from overnight tonight. Weiss/Jackson Day 3 Valid 12Z Thu Jun 19 2025 - 12Z Fri Jun 20 2025 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR AN AREA FROM THE MID-SOUTH THROUGH INTERIOR NEW ENGLAND... A mid-level longwave trough axis will progress eastward from the lower/mid-Mississippi Valley to the Atlantic coast on Thursday. This trough will push an accompanying surface cold front beneath it, and this front is progged to reach the Eastern Seaboard by 12Z Friday. The overlap of the front with its parent trough will drive another strong corridor of lift through height falls/convergence, into an environment supportive of convection with heavy rain. Despite the rapid progression of this front, the Marginal Risk is expanded from TN through southern AR due to potential short- duration training of thunderstorms due to mean 0-6km winds that are parallel to the boundary. With rain rates likely eclipsing 1"/hr at times, this should produce stripes of 1-2" of rainfall, with locally as much as 3" in a few locations as suggested by 12Z consensus including the experimental RRFS which is the first CAM to go out through Day 3. While in general this pattern suggests only an isolated flash flood risk, there are rather vulnerable soils in the central Appalachians, so a targeted Slight could be needed in future updates, particularly as it gets more into the typical CAM range. Weiss/Jackson 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