Quantitative Precipitation Forecast
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573 FOUS30 KWBC 012109 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 509 PM EDT Wed May 1 2024 Day 1 Valid 01Z Thu May 02 2024 - 12Z Thu May 02 2024 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF CENTRAL AND EASTERN TEXAS... ...16Z Update... ...Southern Plains... Latest CAMs have shown a growing consensus on the potential for training cells farther west towards the Edwards Plateau closer to the dryline. Latest RAP guidance shows an acceleration in the 850mb LLJ over the Rio Grande this afternoon that provides strong theta-e advection at that level. This also coincides with the region being ideally placed beneath the left-exit region of a 250mb subtropical jet streak, sufficient shear for sustaining mesocyclones, and PWs >1" that are above the 90th climatological percentile. With some portions of the Edwards Plataea and Concho Valley having received as much as 300% of normal rainfall over the past week, soils are a little more susceptible to runoff. Decided to expand the Slight Risk into this region for these reasons. In South Central TX, latest CAMs consensus shows the QPF footprint shifting south towards the I-35 and I-10 corridors between San Antonio and Austin, and even on west into the heart of the Hill Country. This is largely due to the core of the 850mb LLJ being focused more over this part of the region in recent runs. These areas are more elevated and can further increase low-level ascent in a synoptic scale setup that supports large scale growth of organized thunderstorm clusters. The 12Z RAP depicts highly saturated surface-700mb soundings north and east of San Antonio this evening where low-mid level RH values are averaging around 90% saturation and warm cloud layers as deep as 13,000ft. The ECMWF SAT shows PWs approaching 1.75" that are as high as the 99.5 climatological percentile by 00Z this evening and MUCAPE >2,000 J/kg. The 12Z HREF now sports moderate chances (40-60%) for rainfall totals >5" near San Antonio and suburbs of the city along I-35 and I-10. With the added concern for 2-3"/hr rainfall rates within the more urbanized I-35 corridor, where runoff will be accentuated, chose to expand the Moderate Risk area west the Austin/San Antonio metro areas. ...Midwest/Central Plains... The northern flank of the Slight and Marginal Risks were trimmed due to less available instability over southeast SD, northwest IA, and central NE. The Slight Risk was expanded farther south into northern KS and northwest MO where these areas are more ideally placed at the nose of a robust 850mb LLJ that tops the 90th climatological percentile for wind speeds over eastern KS. Admittedly, there remains quite the dispersion in CAMs guidance in the placement of heaviest rainfall some some guidance as far north as east-central NE and as far south as east-central KS. Using the position of the 850mb LLJ and the expected frontal position as references, opted to position the Slight just north of the frontal boundary over central Kansas. This should be where the strongest ascent occurs as the 850mb LLJ intersects the front and where MUCAPE >1,000 J/kg is also likely to be in place tonight. Mullinax ---Previous Discussion--- ...Southern Plains... Latest hi-res ensemble and associated CAMs have come into better agreement on the development of a complex across TX with origins out in west TX near the dryline, growing upscale through the evening with aid from a well defined LLJ and shortwave progressive within the sub-tropical jet over the region. Given consensus now favoring at least 2" of precip over a large expanse of central and eastern TX with much higher embedded amounts given the convective nature of the precip and anomalous tropospheric moisture (2-2.5 standard deviations above normal PWATs), have allowed for an upgrade to a Moderate Risk over the aforementioned areas. This is now the primary period of interest with a shift away from the previous MDT that was forecast for the now D2 time frame. The reasoning for the shift was due to the progressive nature of the convective pattern within the latest CAMs suite, as well as some instance within the ensemble bias corrected mean QPF footprint. Previous forecast iterations were more robust for the now D2 time frame, but the addition of CAMs guidance and the ensemble have allowed for a shift in the timing of when the heaviest precipitation would occur, as well as the general locations. 00z HREF EAS probabilities for at least 2" of rainfall are now upwards of 40% across a large swath of central and east TX, a good portion now overlapping with the area that saw extreme rainfall totals over 6" from this past weekend. The conjunction of heavy rain over those areas impacted and forecasted rates exceeding 2"/hr will likely force easier flash flooding potential due to the moist antecedent conditions in place. Also of note is the area over central TX where despite missing the previous rainfall, the flash instances are climo favored due to the soils and high runoff potential. With coordination with the local WFO`s involved within both TX and LA, the MDT risk was shifted to account for the abrupt change in convective timing and impacts. ...Midwest/Central Plains... A closed upper low is currently analyzed over Big Sky into the southwestern Canadian Provinces. A robust mid-level vorticity maxima will pivot around the base of the mean trough carved out by the upper low with sights on the central plains and adjacent Midwest allowing for rapid convective development downstream with a corridor of heavy rain forming later this afternoon through the remainder of the period. Guidance has trended to a favored heavy rain footprint across northern KS through eastern NE with the heaviest rain with a swath of 2-4" of rainfall over the course of this evening into early Thursday AM. 00z HREF EAS probabilities for at least 1" have become most aggressive in-of southeast NE which matches well with the current ML output from the past several runs. This makes sense synoptically given the best mid-level forcing will be downstream of the approaching vort max in an axis of diffluence perfectly aligned overhead. Rates between 1-2"/hr will be common within the areal extent of convection leading to some local totals between that 2-4" marker forecast. This should be sufficient for some higher flash flood potential within larger urbanized settings and areas that see the higher rates in question. The progressive nature of the precip will limit the higher end impacts, so the previous SLGT risk forecast will suffice despite the alignment synoptically. Kleebauer Day 2 Valid 12Z Thu May 02 2024 - 12Z Fri May 03 2024 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER MUCH OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY EXTENDING FROM THE NORTHERN MIDWEST DOWN TOWARDS THE GULF COAST... ...2030Z Update... ...Midwest... Trimmed down the far northern and western flanks of the Marginal and Slight in the Midwest where probabilistic guidance in heavier QPF totals >1" were decreasing and instability will be lower to the north of the surface low track through the Upper Mississippi Valley Thursday evening. The area most likely to see the heaviest rainfall will be closer to the triple point low, which in this case would favor an area from southern IA on north and east through eastern IA and into southwest WI. NAEFS shows this designated area sporting >90th climatological percentile PWs (1.3-1.5") between 18Z Thurs and 00Z Fri, as well as IVTs above the 97.5 climatological percentile (500-700 kg/m/s) in that same period. 12Z HREF shows MUCAPE between 500-1,000 J/kg will also be present. Hourly rainfall rates up to 2"/hr are possible in the strong est storms, which would support the potential for slash flooding in these areas. Farther south, a negatively tilted 500-700mb axis emerging out of the Ozarks will still be capable of producing strong-to-severe thunderstorms that could track across much of western MO and eastern KS. Localized rainfall rates surpassing 2"/hr cannot be ruled out given PWs topping 1.5", MUCAPE approaching 1,500 J/kg, and mean 1000-500mb RH values as high as 90%. ...Southern Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley... The expansive Slight Risk in the South Central U.S. was expanded a little farther west more into central TX and central OK where latest CAMs guidance has slowed down the cold front approaching from the northwest. Farther south, there remains some uncertainty on the position and duration of the ongoing cluster of storms in the early-mid morning hours Thursday. Should storms stick around longer into the morning hours along and north of I-10, there could be the need for either an additional expansion of the Slight Risk or an upgrade to Moderate Risk should flash flooding be more extensive and linger beyond 12Z Thursday. Recent rainfall in western Louisiana (2-5" above normal over the past 7 days) has left soils in the area more sensitive to 2-3"/hr rainfall rates, which are supported with PWs just short of 2.0" and skinny MLCAPE up to 1,000 J/kg present. Overall, the Slight Risk remains on track but the setup in eastern TX and western LA will be closely monitored overnight. Mullinax ---Previous Discussion--- ...Midwest... Previous forecast still has merit with little deviation from past issuance. Thus, maintained continuity from the last discussion with some minor changes to details within the discussion below.... Overnight convection from this evening will continue to march northeastward as the congealed cold pools from the initial cell mergers will advance through the central Midwest with sights on northern IA into WI and MN on Thursday morning. The complex will eventually peter out as it moves northward into a less favorable environment which will put an end to the flooding threat as we move into the afternoon. Later in afternoon and evening, a cold front will propagate to the east out of the central plains with a redevelopment of convection over eastern KS, IA, and northwest MO. This will allow for the secondary peak of flash flooding potential as thunderstorms migrate through the mid and upper Mississippi Valley, impacting some areas that were just affected in the last 24 hrs. With the lower FFGs expected, the threshold for flooding will be lower than climatological norms for some areas within the expected secondary convective regime. Totals are currently within the 1.5-3" range on guidance which is significant enough to warrant at least the current SLGT risk. ...Southern Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley... As stated previously in the D1 outlook, our complex of thunderstorms in TX will migrate eastward into the Lower Mississippi Valley with heavy rainfall likely within the western half of LA into southern AR. The setup has now trended towards a "front loaded" forecast where the primary rainfall in the period that would induce flash flood concerns will occur during Thursday morning and early afternoon before dissipating due to the loss of sufficient upper forcing. The back end of the latest CAMs and associated HREF signal the opportunity for upwards of 2-3" of rainfall during that short time frame Thursday AM which will be enough to cause problems given the overlap from the previous weekend event that dropped copious amounts of rainfall over southeast TX into western LA. 00z HREF blended mean has an areal extent of 1.5-2" with probability matched mean upwards of 3" along the TX/LA border. HREF neighborhood probability for rates exceeding 2"/hr are also upwards of 30-40% within the same areas, correlating with the forecasted rainfall in that 2-3" zone. The setup really comes down to the timing of the complex in TX as to whether a reintroduction of a MDT risk will be needed after it was downgraded and shifted one period earlier. This will be assessed in future forecast updates as we closely monitor radar and hi-res guidance trends over the course of today and overnight into Thursday. For now, the SLGT risk will remain with wording of it being on the higher end of the risk threshold. Further north across KS and OK, the cold front to the north will move south with a push from high pressure nosing in through the plains in wake of the low pressure moving to the north. An area of convection will likely form over the central plains and move south with the boundary leading to more locally heavy rainfall in association with the area of convection. The threat is less aggressive compared to what is expected further south, but the chances are still prevalent. The SLGT risk was maintained from the previous D3 connecting the two primary areas of interest to the north and south. Kleebauer Day 3 Valid 12Z Fri May 03 2024 - 12Z Sat May 04 2024 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF TEXAS, THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY, TENNESSEE VALLEY, CENTRAL PLAINS, AND THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST... ...2030Z Update... Little in the way of change for the inherited Marginal Risks aside from minor adjustments based on the latest QPF. There was some consideration to adding a Marginal Risk in portions of the Great Lakes given the >90th climatological percentile PWs present according to the ECMWF SAT, but thunderstorm activity looks fairly progressive and confidence in sufficient instability being present was not high as of this forecast cycle. Mullinax ---Previous Discussion--- ...Southern Plains and Southeast... A multitude of shortwaves will ripple through the flow out of the subtropical jet with convective development across portions of TX through the Lower Mississippi Valley up into the Tennessee Valley. The convection over TX will have the best potential for flash flood concerns due to the regional instability and alignment of a stalled frontal boundary forecast across the central and eastern portion of the state with the dryline positioned over west TX. QPF distribution is scattered in nature with the maxima shifting all over the place pending deterministic. Considering the spread, the MRGL risk inherited was maintained, but there is potential for an upgrade within the two area boundaries due to the features being a focal point for training convection and surface convergence. Further east, widely scattered thunderstorms will produce heavy rainfall at times with the best opportunity occurring earlier in the period when the strongest shortwave progresses through the region(s). Ensemble bias corrected QPF is consistent with a maximum across LA which will have gone through some significant precip prior, so that will be another area to monitor in time for potential upgrades. Forecast QPF is still marginal for any upgrade potential, but CAMs will shed more light as we move closer to the time period of interest. ...Central Plains... A fairly robust mid-level perturbation will eject east-southeast out of WY/CO with convection initiating over the Front Range, eventually congealing into a MCS as it migrates eastward through southern NE into KS. Models are in agreement of at least some modest QPF with 1-2" scattered across the aforementioned areas and QPF maxima running upwards of 3" at this time. These MCS setups are notorious for localized flooding concerns, so wanted to make sure to add a Marginal Risk area to cover for the potential. As we move closer, the MRGL risk will likely be shifted around to account for the trends in guidance, especially within D1 when the CAMs and HREF provide more favor. ...Pacific Northwest... A relatively weak IVT pulse will enter coastal OR and northwest CA by the second half of the period with locally heavy rainfall expected through Saturday morning. IVT index is running at an "AR 1" which signals a weaker atmospheric river event, but one that can still produce modest rainfall totals to the coastal plain. Ensemble trends have come up a bit from previous forecasts with QPF running between 1.5-2.5 over the span of 12 hrs (00-12z Saturday), with a bit more as we head into D4. As a result, kept continuity with the MRGL risk from previous forecast package. Kleebauer 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 $$