• HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion...updated

    From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Wed Jun 12 13:50:10 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 121349 AAA
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    949 AM EDT Wed Jun 12 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 1343Z Wed Jun 12 2024 - 12Z Thu Jun 13 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    FLORIDA AND CENTRAL TEXAS...

    ...1350z Special Update...

    A prominent shortwave continues to slowly maneuver over central TX
    with ongoing convection north of Austin up towards Killeen down
    through Jarrell and adjacent areas. Rates have been generally
    between 1.5-2.5"/hr with some sporadic 3"/hr amounts at times in
    specific cells. Totals will run generally 1-3" under the focused
    area with maxima around 5" for locations that see multiple cells
    move overhead. Flash flooding is ongoing in multiple areas in the
    above corridor leading to confidence in higher flash flooding risks
    allowing for an intermediate upgrade to a SLGT risk across portions
    of central TX.=20

    Kleebauer


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Southern Florida...

    Bands of heavy showers have set up to the east of a weak low
    positioned offshore the Tampa Bay region and has been yielding
    rainfall rates of 1 to 2 hours. This convection and intensity is
    expected to persist into the morning hours. Areal averages of 1 to
    3 inches will be common for central and southeast portions of the
    the peninsula while the southwest side will be much wetter with 3
    to 8 inches forecast. Isolated higher amounts may be possible
    between Tampa Bay and the Everglades. A Slight Risk covers from
    Tampa Bay to Melbourne to points south and a Marginal Risk area
    spans from central Florida and encompasses the Slight Risk.

    ...Texas...

    Showers and thunderstorms will focus across central/eastern Texas
    where the best lift and instability aligns with the pooled Gulf
    moisture. Local rainfall totals likely within the 1-2 inch range
    with maxes closer to 3 inches. While amounts are on the lower end
    the recent rains will have increased soil saturation thus lowering
    the amount of rain needed to become problematic. The Marginal Risk
    was maintained for an isolated threat for flooding concerns for
    portions of central and eastern Texas toward the Mid and Upper
    Coast.

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley...

    Showers and thunderstorms will move through the Northern Plains and
    Upper Mississippi Valley ahead of an advancing cold front. PW
    values of 1.5 inches over much of the north-central part of the
    country will help boost rainfall efficiency and amounts, potentially
    spreading 1 to 3 inches over the sensitive area and may lead to
    isolated areas of flooding. The Marginal Risk area remains in
    effect for portions of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa.

    Campbell


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Thu Jun 13 2024 - 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    FLORIDA...

    ...Florida...

    Heavy rains near and south of a stalled front will persist adding
    an additional 1 to 4 inches of rain to the already wet state. The
    risk for flooding will remain elevated therefore maintained the Slight
    Risk from Tampa Bay to Melbourne metros and south to the Keys and
    the Marginal Risk area for central Florida.

    ...Midwest...

    The central Midwest will see the pattern evolve upstream to
    overhead by Thursday afternoon and evening with a shortwave
    progression bisecting the region along with a cold front moving
    through on the base of a low moving through the northern Great
    Lakes in to Ontario. PW values around 1.25 inches will still be
    enough to help boost rainfall rates across the Midwest. Areal
    averages of 1 to 3 inches will be possible across this part of the
    country where recent rains have left soils nearly saturated. Rain
    may become excessive and lead to isolated instances flooding. The
    inherited Marginal Risk remains in good order and covers eastern
    Iowa/Missouri to southwest Michigan and northern Indiana.

    Campbell


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024 - 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    FLORIDA...

    ...South Florida...

    The frontal boundary will begin to sink south as a cold front
    through central Florida during this period. Meanwhile tropical
    moisture will persist across the state while now moving up the
    eastern Seaboard. Guidance suggests this period to be less wet than
    the last few days however the areal averages for southern and
    central Florida are less than 2 inches. Given the multi-day heavy
    rain event the threat for excessive rainfall and flooding concerns
    will remain elevated for this period, therefore a Slight Risk
    continues for South Florida and a Marginal Risk for central
    Florida.

    ...Rockies and Plains...

    Anomalous moisture over much of the Rockies and adjacent Plains
    will migrate eastward with time as a low pressure system exits
    into the High Plains. Some higher QPF is expected near the higher
    terrain of northeast New Mexico and eastern Colorado. Much Nebraska
    and the surrounding area will have be near or north of the warm
    front and could easily pick up 1 to 3 inches of rainfall. A vast
    majority of this region has 3-hr FFG near 1.5/2 inches however
    there are very isolated locations as low as 0.25 inch. A Marginal
    Risk is in effect from northeast New Mexico to Iowa/Minnesota/South
    Dakota.

    ...New England...

    The shortwave and associated cold front will sweep through the
    Great Lakes region and lift through the Northeast during this
    period. Showers and thunderstorms are expected to spread much of
    the Northeast however focusing the higher QPF values across
    southern New England where tropical moisture will be advecting
    northward into the region. Guidance does show variance on the
    location and the max value but consensus seems to favor southern
    New Hampshire/Maine where FFG is as low as 1.5/2 inches at this
    time. Isolated instances of flooding may arise. A Marginal Risk
    spans from southeast New York to Downeast Maine.


    Campbell


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8hZ9YftjGmfz4Qf9e2-bn1Up1PLdj1Eb31xmjHPoEs64= PMJ6oNqyld8rWiCH9gg7Utq_4Q05bOM8B_nlwxJdlZCVxY8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8hZ9YftjGmfz4Qf9e2-bn1Up1PLdj1Eb31xmjHPoEs64= PMJ6oNqyld8rWiCH9gg7Utq_4Q05bOM8B_nlwxJdbunFU6Q$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8hZ9YftjGmfz4Qf9e2-bn1Up1PLdj1Eb31xmjHPoEs64= PMJ6oNqyld8rWiCH9gg7Utq_4Q05bOM8B_nlwxJdfMeHA5w$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 13 14:19:50 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 131419 AAA
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1019 AM EDT Thu Jun 13 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 13 2024 - 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN FLORIDA...

    ...1420Z Update...

    After collaboration with the local Miami WFO, have opted to upgrade
    a portion of the southern FL Peninsula to a High Risk to account
    for significant impacts expected with the next round of heavy
    rainfall over extremely sensitive areas that include the urban
    corridor in Southeast FL through the I-75 corridor over Alligator
    Alley. Additional totals of 2-5" are likely with locally as high as
    10+" in isolated locations along the southwest coastal areas
    extending through the interior of the Peninsula. Considering the
    ongoing flooding with many reports of standing high water and the
    historically low FFG indices for all 1/3/6/12 hour intervals, the
    prospects for significant impacts will continue through the
    afternoon and evening. Thus, the High Risk was issued to account
    for the general expectation.=20

    Kleebauer


    ...Previous Discussion...=20

    ...Florida...

    Several inches of rain focused over South Florida yesterday which
    has left soils water logged and have lowered the 1/3/6 hr FFG to as
    low as 0.25 inch. The latest hi-res guidance show another very
    heavy band developing potentially over the same areas by late
    morning and into the afternoon hours. It will take very little
    additional rain to aggravate ongoing flooding in rural and urban
    locations. A Moderate was raised for a majority of the southern
    counties which includes the Miami metro where areal averages with
    be around 3 inches with isolated maximums up to 8 inches possible
    per hi-res guidance.

    Totals in the periods prior will be running between 3-12" for an
    areal average across the above corridor with some maxes approaching
    15" in the areas that have been hit the hardest over successive
    days. Considering the repeated nature of the heavy precip,
    expectation is for more flash flooding to arise late Thursday
    morning through the afternoon as diurnal destabilization within the
    convergent axis provides another round of significant rainfall for
    those that have seen a prolific amount already.

    ...Midwest...

    Shortwave over the Northern Plains will pivot around the northern
    periphery of the mid-level ridge located across the Southwest U.S
    with sights on the central Midwest by Thursday afternoon. At the
    surface, a cold front will be pressing south-southeast over
    portions of the Central Plains through the Mid-Mississippi Valley.
    The coupling of the two distinct features in the midst of a
    prolific thermodynamic regime located over the above area (MLCAPE
    exceeding 4000 J/kg) will help initiate a robust line of convection
    with cores capable of locally enhanced rainfall as they move
    southeast with the forecast steering flow. The Marginal Risk was
    maintained to allow for more consensus with guidance as they get
    inside 24 hrs of the event.

    While there continues to be some variance in where the convection
    will be, consensus favors a line from the borders of
    Iowa/Missouri/Illinois to east/northeast of Chicago where areal
    averages of 1 to 3 inches are forecast. The environment may be
    conducive for locally significant rainfall in the strongest
    convective cores, particularly if backbuilding cells become
    anchored to the front.

    Campbell/Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024 - 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    FLORIDA...

    ...South Florida...

    The frontal boundary will begin to sink south as a cold front
    through central Florida during this period and heavy rain will
    continue across South Florida. Although the PW values across the
    state will be reducing there will still be adequate moisture to
    help produce and additional 1 to 2+ inches over the over-saturated
    region. A Slight Risk remains in effect for South Florida and a
    Marginal Risk for central Florida.

    ...Rockies and Plains...

    A strong upper level disturbance exits northeast out of the Four
    Corners with a strengthening low in the lee of the Rockies.
    Scattered heavy rain signatures with some isolated totals exceeding
    2" are forecast. Local enhancement of QPF is expected within the
    higher elevations of northeast New Mexico otherwise the bulk of the
    high QPF is expected across the Central Plains, roughly from
    Boulder to Sioux Falls and could easily pick up 1 to 3+ inches of
    rainfall. A vast majority of this region has 3-hr FFG near 1.5/2
    inches however there are very isolated locations as low as 0.25
    inch. A Marginal Risk is in effect from northeast New Mexico to Iowa/Minnesota/South Dakota. There may be a need for a small Slight
    Risk area with future updates if QPF trends continue to increase.

    ...New England...

    A cold front will advance through Ontario/Quebec and reach the
    Northeastern U.S during peak diurnal destabilization. Convection is
    expected to develop along and ahead of the front and will be
    capable of isolated heavy rain instances from Pennsylvania to New
    England and into the Canadian maritimes. The highest QPF is
    focusing across southeast New England where guidance suggests areal
    average of 1 to 2 inches. The progressive nature of the convection
    will limit the threat to marginal territories, although the
    urbanization factors in-of the Lower Hudson up through southern
    New England could produce some locally enhanced risks if a storm
    overperforms.

    Campbell/Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024 - 12Z Sun Jun 16 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS
    OF IOWA, MINNESOTA AND WISCONSIN...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley to Southern Plains...

    During this period a cold front will be pushing through the
    Northern Plains while a warm front lifts from the Central Plains
    into the Upper Mississippi Valley. PW values of 1 to 1.5 inches
    will be drawn into this system, reaching a peak of +2 standard
    deviations above average over Iowa and Minnesota. There will be
    strong mid-level ascent embedded with this pooled moisture which
    will help enhance rainfall amounts and coverage from the Plains to
    the Upper Mississippi Valley. Guidance is showing 1 to 3 inches
    will be common although local maximums may reach 5 inches. A Slight
    Risk is in effect from northwest Iowa to west-central Wisconsin. A
    Marginal Risk area spans from North Dakota eastward to Lake
    Michigan and southwest to Oklahoma.

    ...South Florida...

    Convection is expected to linger nearing the decaying front
    boundary and may produce an additional 1 inch or so. The soils will
    be over-saturated and sensitive to any additional rainfall. A
    Marginal Risk is in effect given the ongoing flooding concerns.

    Campbell


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8NasLi784zzjm7uwwZeJkilAmCiEW2Q8V6QD7xcgkQCQ= 83OtkBpFt4AHYq9KvSLlbpHA5I9pugr1akWv6r4vWeHCvWs$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8NasLi784zzjm7uwwZeJkilAmCiEW2Q8V6QD7xcgkQCQ= 83OtkBpFt4AHYq9KvSLlbpHA5I9pugr1akWv6r4v7rxovKk$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!8NasLi784zzjm7uwwZeJkilAmCiEW2Q8V6QD7xcgkQCQ= 83OtkBpFt4AHYq9KvSLlbpHA5I9pugr1akWv6r4vRRFzgqs$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 13 14:23:06 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 131422 AAB
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1022 AM EDT Thu Jun 13 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 1422Z Thu Jun 13 2024 - 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN FLORIDA...

    ...1420Z Update...

    After collaboration with the local Miami WFO, have opted to upgrade
    a portion of the southern FL Peninsula to a High Risk to account
    for significant impacts expected with the next round of heavy
    rainfall over extremely sensitive areas that include the urban
    corridor in Southeast FL through the I-75 corridor over Alligator
    Alley. Additional totals of 2-5" are likely with locally as high as
    10+" in isolated locations along the southwest coastal areas
    extending through the interior of the Peninsula. Considering the
    ongoing flooding with many reports of standing high water and the
    historically low FFG indices for all 1/3/6/12 hour intervals, the
    prospects for significant impacts will continue through the
    afternoon and evening. Thus, the High Risk was issued to account
    for the general expectation.

    Kleebauer


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Florida...

    Several inches of rain focused over South Florida yesterday which
    has left soils water logged and have lowered the 1/3/6 hr FFG to as
    low as 0.25 inch. The latest hi-res guidance show another very
    heavy band developing potentially over the same areas by late
    morning and into the afternoon hours. It will take very little
    additional rain to aggravate ongoing flooding in rural and urban
    locations. A Moderate was raised for a majority of the southern
    counties which includes the Miami metro where areal averages with
    be around 3 inches with isolated maximums up to 8 inches possible
    per hi-res guidance.

    Totals in the periods prior will be running between 3-12" for an
    areal average across the above corridor with some maxes approaching
    15" in the areas that have been hit the hardest over successive
    days. Considering the repeated nature of the heavy precip,
    expectation is for more flash flooding to arise late Thursday
    morning through the afternoon as diurnal destabilization within the
    convergent axis provides another round of significant rainfall for
    those that have seen a prolific amount already.

    ...Midwest...

    Shortwave over the Northern Plains will pivot around the northern
    periphery of the mid-level ridge located across the Southwest U.S
    with sights on the central Midwest by Thursday afternoon. At the
    surface, a cold front will be pressing south-southeast over
    portions of the Central Plains through the Mid-Mississippi Valley.
    The coupling of the two distinct features in the midst of a
    prolific thermodynamic regime located over the above area (MLCAPE
    exceeding 4000 J/kg) will help initiate a robust line of convection
    with cores capable of locally enhanced rainfall as they move
    southeast with the forecast steering flow. The Marginal Risk was
    maintained to allow for more consensus with guidance as they get
    inside 24 hrs of the event.

    While there continues to be some variance in where the convection
    will be, consensus favors a line from the borders of
    Iowa/Missouri/Illinois to east/northeast of Chicago where areal
    averages of 1 to 3 inches are forecast. The environment may be
    conducive for locally significant rainfall in the strongest
    convective cores, particularly if backbuilding cells become
    anchored to the front.

    Campbell/Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024 - 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    FLORIDA...

    ...South Florida...

    The frontal boundary will begin to sink south as a cold front
    through central Florida during this period and heavy rain will
    continue across South Florida. Although the PW values across the
    state will be reducing there will still be adequate moisture to
    help produce and additional 1 to 2+ inches over the over-saturated
    region. A Slight Risk remains in effect for South Florida and a
    Marginal Risk for central Florida.

    ...Rockies and Plains...

    A strong upper level disturbance exits northeast out of the Four
    Corners with a strengthening low in the lee of the Rockies.
    Scattered heavy rain signatures with some isolated totals exceeding
    2" are forecast. Local enhancement of QPF is expected within the
    higher elevations of northeast New Mexico otherwise the bulk of the
    high QPF is expected across the Central Plains, roughly from
    Boulder to Sioux Falls and could easily pick up 1 to 3+ inches of
    rainfall. A vast majority of this region has 3-hr FFG near 1.5/2
    inches however there are very isolated locations as low as 0.25
    inch. A Marginal Risk is in effect from northeast New Mexico to Iowa/Minnesota/South Dakota. There may be a need for a small Slight
    Risk area with future updates if QPF trends continue to increase.

    ...New England...

    A cold front will advance through Ontario/Quebec and reach the
    Northeastern U.S during peak diurnal destabilization. Convection is
    expected to develop along and ahead of the front and will be
    capable of isolated heavy rain instances from Pennsylvania to New
    England and into the Canadian maritimes. The highest QPF is
    focusing across southeast New England where guidance suggests areal
    average of 1 to 2 inches. The progressive nature of the convection
    will limit the threat to marginal territories, although the
    urbanization factors in-of the Lower Hudson up through southern
    New England could produce some locally enhanced risks if a storm
    overperforms.

    Campbell/Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024 - 12Z Sun Jun 16 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS
    OF IOWA, MINNESOTA AND WISCONSIN...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley to Southern Plains...

    During this period a cold front will be pushing through the
    Northern Plains while a warm front lifts from the Central Plains
    into the Upper Mississippi Valley. PW values of 1 to 1.5 inches
    will be drawn into this system, reaching a peak of +2 standard
    deviations above average over Iowa and Minnesota. There will be
    strong mid-level ascent embedded with this pooled moisture which
    will help enhance rainfall amounts and coverage from the Plains to
    the Upper Mississippi Valley. Guidance is showing 1 to 3 inches
    will be common although local maximums may reach 5 inches. A Slight
    Risk is in effect from northwest Iowa to west-central Wisconsin. A
    Marginal Risk area spans from North Dakota eastward to Lake
    Michigan and southwest to Oklahoma.

    ...South Florida...

    Convection is expected to linger nearing the decaying front
    boundary and may produce an additional 1 inch or so. The soils will
    be over-saturated and sensitive to any additional rainfall. A
    Marginal Risk is in effect given the ongoing flooding concerns.

    Campbell


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KEHMHseaHGALuw0MPJg4yThiayZA1T6DdNk5260WTI-= O705idiPE2TQkw6kHZVe8DWOulLust2mVHxIFnI2TpDxBi8$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KEHMHseaHGALuw0MPJg4yThiayZA1T6DdNk5260WTI-= O705idiPE2TQkw6kHZVe8DWOulLust2mVHxIFnI2ymJOpsg$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!7KEHMHseaHGALuw0MPJg4yThiayZA1T6DdNk5260WTI-= O705idiPE2TQkw6kHZVe8DWOulLust2mVHxIFnI2ZPjCGUc$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 13 14:26:16 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 131425 AAC
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1025 AM EDT Thu Jun 13 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 1425Z Thu Jun 13 2024 - 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN FLORIDA...

    ...1425Z Update...

    After collaboration with the local Miami WFO, have opted to upgrade
    a portion of the southern FL Peninsula to a High Risk to account
    for significant impacts expected with the next round of heavy
    rainfall over extremely sensitive areas that include the urban
    corridor in Southeast FL through the I-75 corridor over Alligator
    Alley. Additional totals of 2-5" are likely with locally as high as
    10+" in isolated locations along the southwest coastal areas
    extending through the interior of the Peninsula. Considering the
    ongoing flooding with many reports of standing high water and the
    historically low FFG indices for all 1/3/6/12 hour intervals, the
    prospects for significant impacts will continue through the
    afternoon and evening. Thus, the High Risk was issued to account
    for the general expectation.

    Kleebauer


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Florida...

    Several inches of rain focused over South Florida yesterday which
    has left soils water logged and have lowered the 1/3/6 hr FFG to as
    low as 0.25 inch. The latest hi-res guidance show another very
    heavy band developing potentially over the same areas by late
    morning and into the afternoon hours. It will take very little
    additional rain to aggravate ongoing flooding in rural and urban
    locations. A Moderate was raised for a majority of the southern
    counties which includes the Miami metro where areal averages with
    be around 3 inches with isolated maximums up to 8 inches possible
    per hi-res guidance.

    Totals in the periods prior will be running between 3-12" for an
    areal average across the above corridor with some maxes approaching
    15" in the areas that have been hit the hardest over successive
    days. Considering the repeated nature of the heavy precip,
    expectation is for more flash flooding to arise late Thursday
    morning through the afternoon as diurnal destabilization within the
    convergent axis provides another round of significant rainfall for
    those that have seen a prolific amount already.

    ...Midwest...

    Shortwave over the Northern Plains will pivot around the northern
    periphery of the mid-level ridge located across the Southwest U.S
    with sights on the central Midwest by Thursday afternoon. At the
    surface, a cold front will be pressing south-southeast over
    portions of the Central Plains through the Mid-Mississippi Valley.
    The coupling of the two distinct features in the midst of a
    prolific thermodynamic regime located over the above area (MLCAPE
    exceeding 4000 J/kg) will help initiate a robust line of convection
    with cores capable of locally enhanced rainfall as they move
    southeast with the forecast steering flow. The Marginal Risk was
    maintained to allow for more consensus with guidance as they get
    inside 24 hrs of the event.

    While there continues to be some variance in where the convection
    will be, consensus favors a line from the borders of
    Iowa/Missouri/Illinois to east/northeast of Chicago where areal
    averages of 1 to 3 inches are forecast. The environment may be
    conducive for locally significant rainfall in the strongest
    convective cores, particularly if backbuilding cells become
    anchored to the front.

    Campbell/Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 14 2024 - 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR SOUTHERN
    FLORIDA...

    ...South Florida...

    The frontal boundary will begin to sink south as a cold front
    through central Florida during this period and heavy rain will
    continue across South Florida. Although the PW values across the
    state will be reducing there will still be adequate moisture to
    help produce and additional 1 to 2+ inches over the over-saturated
    region. A Slight Risk remains in effect for South Florida and a
    Marginal Risk for central Florida.

    ...Rockies and Plains...

    A strong upper level disturbance exits northeast out of the Four
    Corners with a strengthening low in the lee of the Rockies.
    Scattered heavy rain signatures with some isolated totals exceeding
    2" are forecast. Local enhancement of QPF is expected within the
    higher elevations of northeast New Mexico otherwise the bulk of the
    high QPF is expected across the Central Plains, roughly from
    Boulder to Sioux Falls and could easily pick up 1 to 3+ inches of
    rainfall. A vast majority of this region has 3-hr FFG near 1.5/2
    inches however there are very isolated locations as low as 0.25
    inch. A Marginal Risk is in effect from northeast New Mexico to Iowa/Minnesota/South Dakota. There may be a need for a small Slight
    Risk area with future updates if QPF trends continue to increase.

    ...New England...

    A cold front will advance through Ontario/Quebec and reach the
    Northeastern U.S during peak diurnal destabilization. Convection is
    expected to develop along and ahead of the front and will be
    capable of isolated heavy rain instances from Pennsylvania to New
    England and into the Canadian maritimes. The highest QPF is
    focusing across southeast New England where guidance suggests areal
    average of 1 to 2 inches. The progressive nature of the convection
    will limit the threat to marginal territories, although the
    urbanization factors in-of the Lower Hudson up through southern
    New England could produce some locally enhanced risks if a storm
    overperforms.

    Campbell/Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024 - 12Z Sun Jun 16 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS
    OF IOWA, MINNESOTA AND WISCONSIN...

    ...Upper Mississippi Valley to Southern Plains...

    During this period a cold front will be pushing through the
    Northern Plains while a warm front lifts from the Central Plains
    into the Upper Mississippi Valley. PW values of 1 to 1.5 inches
    will be drawn into this system, reaching a peak of +2 standard
    deviations above average over Iowa and Minnesota. There will be
    strong mid-level ascent embedded with this pooled moisture which
    will help enhance rainfall amounts and coverage from the Plains to
    the Upper Mississippi Valley. Guidance is showing 1 to 3 inches
    will be common although local maximums may reach 5 inches. A Slight
    Risk is in effect from northwest Iowa to west-central Wisconsin. A
    Marginal Risk area spans from North Dakota eastward to Lake
    Michigan and southwest to Oklahoma.

    ...South Florida...

    Convection is expected to linger nearing the decaying front
    boundary and may produce an additional 1 inch or so. The soils will
    be over-saturated and sensitive to any additional rainfall. A
    Marginal Risk is in effect given the ongoing flooding concerns.

    Campbell


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4uWvpNt7K2UHNdIbH9RhP9eueBF1BeaD63IjwHlMIJ_x= Ir_kiHY3kNdT8rvLs1dRNEG3UdPiaw6juLiKLrLjU-DTAzU$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4uWvpNt7K2UHNdIbH9RhP9eueBF1BeaD63IjwHlMIJ_x= Ir_kiHY3kNdT8rvLs1dRNEG3UdPiaw6juLiKLrLj-dcejfc$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4uWvpNt7K2UHNdIbH9RhP9eueBF1BeaD63IjwHlMIJ_x= Ir_kiHY3kNdT8rvLs1dRNEG3UdPiaw6juLiKLrLj8ODQSYM$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Fri Jun 14 23:03:24 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 142303 AAB
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    703 PM EDT Fri Jun 14 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 2259Z Fri Jun 14 2024 - 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024

    ...THERE ARE MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL AREAS ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF THE EASTERN U.S. AND WESTERN PLAINS...

    ...2250Z Update...
    Given convective trends...expanded the Marginal Risk area southward
    and westward across portions of the northern Mid Atlantic...refer
    to WPC Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 439. Similarly, the
    Marginal Risk area was pulled southward...refer to MPD 438.
    Finally...will remove the Slight risk area across southern Florida
    with this update given trends in radar and satellite imagery.

    Bann


    ...16Z Update...

    Moderate Risk inherited for the period was downgraded to a SLGT
    across South FL. More on the change within the "Florida" sub-
    heading below....

    Elsewhere, the two MRGL risk areas across the Northeastern U.S and
    the Central Plains were generally maintained with only some minor
    deviations in the outlined risk areas. The setup across the
    Northeast U.S is unfolding currently with a cold front progressing
    through the eastern Great Lakes with sights further east by the
    second half of the forecast period. A shortwave across western PA
    is holding together fairly well with a core of convection
    propagating eastward into the northern Appalachians within the
    state. The forward speed of the cluster is a positive for limiting
    the threat for flash flooGiven radar trends and lack of ding,
    although some locally heavy rain within an urban setting or complex
    terrain could spell some localized threats in the next 2-4 hours
    on its progression. Guidance is keying on the shortwave entering
    NNJ and the NYC metro with a local enhancement of precip on its
    approach. There will be a general maxima within the corridor across
    NNJ through NYC into the Lower Hudson and western CT based on the
    latest probability fields, but the threat is generally maxed
    between 2-3", at best due to the progressive nature of the event in
    general. This will limit the extent of flash flooding with
    generally localized impacts relegated to the urban corridor.

    The threat over the plains remains steadfast with a quick
    propagation of the shortwave trough and associated convection
    expected later this afternoon and evening. One area to note for a
    general maximum is across the Caprock of eastern NM where a surface
    trough focus will provide an anchor for anticipated supercell
    development earlier this evening. This will promote slow cell
    motions and a higher localized threat once it develops. Otherwise,
    remainder of the plains maintains general continuity.


    ...Florida...

    Previous forecast was downgraded to a SLGT risk across all of South
    Florida with a highlighted "higher-end" SLGT located over the
    southeastern coastal plain in proximity to Miami up through Fort
    Lauderdale. Recent trends in guidance and observations favor less
    of a risk for widespread impacts and more isolated/scattered in
    terms of flash flood potential given the improvements in antecedent
    conditions with stream flows and urban flooding finally able to
    recede over the past 12+ hours. 12z soundings out of KEY and MFL
    indicate a dry tongue located above 600mb with much of the remnant
    moisture trapped beneath 700mb, maintaining PWATs within 2-2.1".
    Comparatively, this is a far cry from the previous days with a
    much greater deep moisture presence within the column allowing for
    a better warm cloud layer presentation and PWATs bordering on the
    upper 95-99th percentile climatologically. Upper pattern is in a
    transition phase with the deeper tropical airmass now pressing back
    to the west as we begin to see more influence of the surface ridge
    over the Atlantic flex further west and southwest over the next
    24+ hours.

    Across the southeast Gulf, a cluster of thunderstorms will maintain
    intensity and begin to press southeastward as outflow driven cold
    pools are forecast to bring the convective cluster towards the Keys
    and not drive inland of the Peninsula. The main convective threat
    over the southern Mainland will stem from a modest LLJ located
    across the southern tip of the Peninsula with destabilization over
    land priming for convective development now through the early
    afternoon. Recent HREF and associated CAMs continue to signal the
    heaviest rain threat across the Homestead to southern Miami area
    with some scattered convection impacting areas north of Miami
    proper up through West Palm Beach. Given the environment in place,
    more organized, widespread heavy thunderstorms are less likely than
    previous periods, but the potential for locally heavy rainfall
    remains with probabilistic fields noting a 20-40% chance of
    exceeding 3" between Miami to Fort Lauderdale with the max
    positioned further south across the Everglades into Homestead
    (50-60%). Conditions will settle after 20z as the primary threat
    shifts north with the best chances for heavy rainfall likely around
    West Palm Beach up through central FL.

    With the general improvements in the FFG's across South
    Florida, more isolated to scattered in convective coverage, and
    in collaboration with WFO Miami, the MDT risk was dropped to a
    SLGT risk with emphasis on the southeast urban corridor due to some
    relevant sensitivities.

    Kleebauer


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northeast...

    A potent upper level shortwave will race from the Midwest to New
    England by early Saturday morning. The associated cold front will
    also move across New York State and into New England. Convection is
    expected to form with these forcings from Pennsylvania north and
    east into New England. Atmospheric moisture will be somewhat
    limited, and the progressive nature of the storms will limit most
    flooding concerns. However, given the low FFGs associated with the
    urban I-95 corridor and potential for cell mergers to occur as the
    storms move through NYC and into southern New England, the Marginal
    Risk area was expanded east to include almost all of southern New
    England except the Cape, as well as all of Long Island. Isolated
    instances of flash flooding are possible in the most flood-prone
    areas as the storms move across the area.

    ...Central Plains...

    A separate upper level shortwave will track northeastward from
    Arizona to the central Plains today. Lee-side cyclogenesis over
    eastern Colorado will tap into moisture from the LLJ with storms
    developing along both the warm and cold fronts across the Marginal
    Risk area. Despite the presence of an LLJ, moisture will be
    somewhat limited as northeasterly flow at 850 mb over the Gulf has
    largely prevented full Gulf moisture from moving into the central
    Plains. Thus, moisture availability will be a limiting factor for
    the storms. Nonetheless, there is some opportunity for raining
    convection in the late afternoon across New Mexico and eastern
    Colorado. The storms will congeal into more of an MCS overnight as
    the storms move a bit more quickly eastward across Nebraska and
    Kansas. With the ingredients for flash flooding largely separate
    from each other, and the area not particularly flood-sensitive, the
    inherited Marginal Risk remains largely unchanged with this update.

    Wegman

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 15 2024 - 12Z Sun Jun 16 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER MIDWEST...

    ...20Z Update...

    A couple changes of note were made to the previous risk areas
    across the Midwest/Plains, as well as Florida.

    Across the Midwest, the SLGT risk is well represented within the
    latest CAMs on both a deterministic and ensemble output, as well as
    a favorable probabilistic signal. Shortwave progression is fairly
    steady with regards to timing and magnitude with a significant
    convective signal focused in-of the corn belt up through the Upper
    Mississippi Valley. Recent ensemble trends pinpoint QPF maxima of
    2-3" in multiple locations, including further south over the NE/IA
    border where morning convection will move overhead from the initial
    wave out of the plains, then spawn near the warm front and motion
    to the northeast later in the period. Probability fields within the
    general confines of the NE/IA border actually jumped significantly
    and became the main focus for the highest neighborhood probs for at
    least 3" the period (Areal coverage of 25-40%). Areas to the north
    where the SLGT was already in place still have reasonable
    outcomes with the max potential still positioned across the Upper
    Mississippi Valley, including the MSP metro area. Neighborhood
    probabilities are hovering between 10-20% for local totals
    exceeding 5", something that cannot be said for areas south into
    the corn belt. This aligns well within the previous forecast and is
    well representative for the SLGT continuation. Further south into
    the southern High Plains, the MRGL was extended to include
    convection initiating over the Panhandle along and just east of the
    dryline positioned over eastern NM. This threat is more isolated,
    but given the supercellular nature of the mode in question and
    sufficient buoyancy, a low-end flash flood risk is forecast for
    the late-afternoon and early-evening hours Saturday.

    Across Florida, the trend downward in the convective pattern will
    continue as the previous pattern shifts away from the Mainland
    with a general seabreeze and diurnally driven convective focus
    returning for the region. The morning may see some convection off
    the FL Straits and adjacent Gulf push north through the FL Keys,
    but the threat is not expected to produce any significant flood
    threat and will dissipate through the mornings hours. A MRGL risk
    was maintained where the seabreeze convection has the best chance
    for isolated flash flood concerns as it propagates inland. This is
    trending towards a low-end threat and the MRGL may be further
    adjusted, or removed pending the future model output and observed
    environment.

    Kleebauer


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Upper Midwest...

    As a strong upper level shortwave tracks northeast out of the
    central Plains and into the Upper Midwest, cyclogenesis occurring
    over the Plains will work to slow the eastward movement of the
    storms, while Iowa and Minnesota are on the nose of an LLJ that
    will be tapping increasingly deep moisture. The result will be the
    potential for training storms along a slow-moving warm frontal
    boundary over Iowa and Minnesota, with cold-frontal storms moving
    through overnight Saturday night having the potential for heavy
    rain as the nocturnal jet strengthens and PWATs associated with the
    LLJ increase to over 1.75 inches ahead of the cold front. Thus,
    there is potential for backbuilding storms as the LLJ shifts east,
    but Corfidi vectors will be perpendicular (westerly) to the
    southerly flow within the LLJ.

    Soils across much of Minnesota and northwestern Wisconsin are more
    saturated than normal for this time of year, so they will be a bit
    more flood prone than normal. Further, the potential for heavy rain
    with backbuilding convection being heightened necessitated the
    continuation of the inherited Slight Risk. The area was shifted a
    bit to the north with the latest guidance, but only nominally. This
    is likely to be the first of several consecutive days with threats
    for heavy rain for the northern Plains and upper Midwest.

    ...Florida...

    Plenty of lingering moisture and weak steering flow should allow
    the typical afternoon convection to develop across portions of the
    Florida Peninsula Saturday afternoon. Guidance is in fair agreement
    that the center of the Peninsula, generally north of Lake
    Okeechobee will be favored for the heaviest rainfall on Saturday,
    but it will be significantly diminished in both coverage and
    intensity from the rain over the Peninsula over the past few days.
    At this point, the heaviest rain should be sufficiently offset from
    the heaviest hit areas of the past few days, so flash flooding
    should be generally isolated.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sun Jun 16 2024 - 12Z Mon Jun 17 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    NORTHERN PLAINS AS WELL AS FOR PORTIONS OF SOUTHERN LOUISIANA...

    ...20Z Update...

    The previous SLGT risks over the Gulf Coast and Northern Plains
    were maintained with little change in the overall risk area(s). The
    best chance for flash flooding will likely occur over the Northern
    Plains with a focus along a stalled cold front across the NE/SD
    border up through southern MN. A fairly strong signal at lead for
    exceptional 850mb frontogenesis located over northern NE extending east-northeast into the northern Midwest. This is textbook for
    primed 925-850mb convergence within the confines of the front,
    tapping into suitable, moist airmass as PWATs settle within 1-2
    deviations above normal. The signal has been most pronounced across
    northern NE within the Sand Hills area which generally limits
    widespread flash flooding concerns due to the efficiency of the
    soils to prevent runoff. The same cannot be said for points to the
    east, mainly across northeast NE into northwest IA and southwestern
    MN, both areas that are more prone for flash flood concerns, and
    will have seen a decent area of QPF in the periods prior. Any
    persistent convergence pattern in those areas will be subject to
    higher potential impact, so the SLGT risk from prior forecast was
    well within reason to maintain continuity.

    Across the Gulf Coast, signals for increasing tropical moisture
    advection from the Gulf have remained steady from previous
    forecasts with some discrepancy in the timing and location of the
    primary plume ejecting north around the western periphery of a
    broad ridge pattern to the east. In any case, the proposed
    advection regime would be more than conducive for heavy rain
    prospects, especially considering this airmass will be similar to
    the one that plagued FL this past week. The persistence of this
    pattern is less of a threat comparatively, but the chance for a
    slug of heavy precip is still within the ensemble QPF footprint.
    The SLGT risk remains given the persistence in guidance and
    expected pattern evolution.

    Kleebauer


    ...Previous Discussion...

    ...Northern Plains...

    The cold front following the heavy rainfall over the northern
    Plains on Saturday will stall out across the Slight Risk area
    around the SD/NE/MN/IA border region. Highly diffluent upper level
    low will increase lift and as the typical nocturnal jet kicks in
    Sunday night, convection is expected to develop over northeastern
    Nebraska through the evening, then track northeastward into
    southwestern Minnesota through the overnight. Slower moving storms
    and higher potential for training is expected across northeastern
    Nebraska, meanwhile southern Minnesota will have the benefit of a
    couple previous days of heavy rain over the region. The stalled out
    front will serve as a focus for convection, increasing the
    likelihood of training as the storm complex tracks northeast. With
    plenty of moisture available for heavy rain, a Slight Risk upgrade
    was introduced with this update to account for both higher
    potential for training over this region and favorable antecedent
    conditions into Minnesota.

    ...Southern Louisiana...

    A portion of the same deep tropical air mass that has haunted south
    Florida over the past few days will have trekked from south Florida
    to the central Gulf Coast by Sunday. Flow straight out of the
    Caribbean will increase PWATs to near 2 inches by Sunday afternoon.
    While convection is not expected to be too widespread, a nearly
    unlimited supply of moisture will allow any storms that form to be
    capable of very heavy rainfall rates. Both Baton Rouge and New
    Orleans will be threatened by storms that may move over those
    respective cities. Soil moisture levels are about normal for this
    time of year, so there has been quite a bit of recovery from the
    last several weeks of occasional heavy rain. Thus, this is a
    lower-end Slight, as more widespread convection is likely in coming
    days. Flood sensitive urban areas are at greatest risk of flash
    flooding Sunday afternoon.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-QIidnEq-W-zd1A_1Cwv9KCKhn8SYr0HSgIYvGchqWzo= eLF2cMSYahW4PxJrU99X1jn4bwytOTmjR0Ry3vMtPqSE_C4$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-QIidnEq-W-zd1A_1Cwv9KCKhn8SYr0HSgIYvGchqWzo= eLF2cMSYahW4PxJrU99X1jn4bwytOTmjR0Ry3vMti9PgDJ0$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!-QIidnEq-W-zd1A_1Cwv9KCKhn8SYr0HSgIYvGchqWzo= eLF2cMSYahW4PxJrU99X1jn4bwytOTmjR0Ry3vMttCFDcWo$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Thu Jun 20 16:13:30 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 201613 AAA
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1213 PM EDT Thu Jun 20 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 16Z Thu Jun 20 2024 - 12Z Fri Jun 21 2024

    ...THERE'S A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    SOUTHEASTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...

    ...Upper Mississippi to Central Missouri Valley...
    The Moderate Risk remains in effect for much of southeastern South
    Dakota with this update, with some slight northward broadening out
    of deference to the 12z HREF. Gulf moisture surging northward
    across the region with the LLJ will be moving into the right
    entrance region of a 100 kt southwesterly jet. A warm front will
    develop across South Dakota this evening as the typical evening
    strengthening of the LLJ occurs. Storms will break out along that
    boundary from the Sand Hills of Nebraska northeast into South
    Dakota. The storms are likely to merge and train along the front as
    they're forming, then shift off to the northeast with the best
    forcing through early Friday morning.

    The primary point of uncertainty remains exactly where the line of
    storms initially forms relative to where it has rained a lot
    recently. Should the storms form too far north and west, closer to
    central SD and the western Sand Hills, then it's likely a cold
    frontal boundary serving as the back edge of the storms will sweep
    across the area as the much more persistent rainfall associated
    with the front falls over a drier area. This would significantly
    decrease the flooding potential in South Dakota. However, the trend
    on a national scale with convective forecasts for multiple inches
    of rain over the past week has almost unanimously trended
    south...meaning the heaviest rainfall totals occur south of where
    the guidance suggests they will. In this case that would support
    storms occurring over areas that have been much harder hit recently
    with heavy rain, resulting in soils being much less receptive to
    the heavy rainfall and therefore more widespread flash flooding.
    Thus, the Moderate Risk remains relatively uncertain in its
    location...though there's been good agreement on the magnitude of
    the heaviest rainfall.


    ...Southwestern Colorado...
    Increasingly anomalous atmospheric moisture to the tune of up to 4
    sigma above normal with PWATs approaching 1 inch will slam into
    the south facing slopes of the San Juan Mountains today into
    tonight. Upslope into the mountains will support the development of
    stationary cells of heavy rain. If these occur over any burn
    scars, then flash flooding will be locally significantly worsened.
    The Slight Risk area inherited was left unchanged and looks solid
    for that area. Hourly rain totals to 2" and local amounts to 4"
    cannot be ruled out.


    ...West Texas into southeast New Mexico...
    The northern portion of the remnant moisture plume of the
    dissipating T.D. Alberto will move northwestward up the Rio Grande
    and into west Texas through the day today and into tonight. More
    widespread light to moderate rainfall than is typical for the
    desert of west Texas is expected. Given the low tolerance of most
    of the area to widespread rainfall -- burn scars -- the Slight
    remains in place...albeit lower confidence as the guidance does not
    appear to be overly wet in this region. However, upstream
    instability is supposed to build to the east of the designated risk
    areas, and it's anomalously moist as inflow from the Gulf forces
    very high moisture around Albero's periphery, so left in the
    Slight Risk as a course of least regret.

    In South Texas, diminishing of the convection in the area behind
    the main plume moving into Mexico has resulted in lessening
    concerns for more widespread flash flooding in the region, in favor
    of more isolated flash flooding. Isolated to very widely scattered
    convection today and tonight should greatly limit any resultant
    flash flooding, despite the newly saturated soils in the area.


    ...New York into New England...
    A Marginal Risk remains in effect across much of upstate New York
    and much of New England and has been nudged a little southward
    based on the 12z HREF. Lying on the northern side of the upper
    ridge will result in periodic upper level disturbances passing
    through and another afternoon and evening of scattered convection.
    Precipitable water values are 1.75-2", and ML CAPE is expected to
    build towards 2000 J/kg. Effective bulk shear is 20-30 kts, which
    should allow for some convective organization. The storms are
    likely to be slow moving, with some mergers expected between less
    and more organized thunderstorm activity. Hourly rain totals to
    2.5" should be possible within this regime, with local amounts to
    5". Widely scattered to possibly episodes of flash flooding are
    possible.


    ...Northeast Florida/Southeast Georgia...
    A new Marginal Risk was introduced for a small convective low that
    the National Hurricane Center is monitoring for tropical cyclone
    development. Precipitable water values of 2-2.5" are expected to
    move into the region ahead of the low due to easterly vertical wind
    shear. Hourly totals to 3" and local amounts to 5" are possible
    within this regime, but such amounts should be isolated to widely
    scattered at best. Soils are dry from a recent dearth of rainfall.
    The track and timing around 12z remain question marks -- whether=20
    it will be a day 1 or day 2 concern. Considering the above, added a
    Marginal Risk on this update.

    Roth/Wegman


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Fri Jun 21 2024 - 12Z Sat Jun 22 2024

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
    SOUTHERN MINNESOTA AND ADJACENT COUNTIES...

    ...Southern Minnesota...

    A Moderate Risk of excessive rainfall remains in effect across
    Southern Minnesota. The Moderate Risk and surrounding Slight were
    shifted several counties to the south as compared to inherited.
    This has been a very typical pattern with forecast convection in
    the guidance over the past week. Unfortunately, this southward
    trend continues to paint areas already hard hit from recent rains
    with additional heavy rainfall amounts.

    Meteorologically, an MCS will be ongoing across eastern portions of
    the risk areas from the Day 1/Thursday period at the start of Day 2
    at 7am. The end of this event will bring some rainfall...locally
    heavy...to portions of the area, generally from the Twin Cities
    south into southeastern Minnesota and western Wisconsin. The
    convection should be on the weakening trend as typical for MCS's as
    solar heating quickly reduces the inflow into the storms and there
    are many more heating sources for the storms, resulting in
    increasing disorganization. Moisture and storms will still be
    around across Minnesota and Wisconsin through the day, but anything
    other than local organization and cell mergers is not expected
    through the afternoon hours.

    On Friday evening, a stronger low and associated stronger shortwave
    will eject into the central Plains. The typical diurnal
    strengthening of the LLJ ahead of the low will raise PWATs to close
    to 2 inches. This will allow for very efficient rainfall production
    as the storms that form in a rather disorganized fashion across
    much of South Dakota organize into a strong MCS over the Moderate
    Risk area.

    As with much of the forecast convection over the past week...the
    guidance continues to trend south with the track of the MCS. The
    biggest question continues to be where does this MCS move as
    compared to the track of the heaviest rains from tonight/Thursday
    night's rainfall/MCS. Nearly all of Minnesota has saturated soils,
    including the southern part of the state, but significant overlap
    between the heaviest rains tonight and the heaviest rains Friday
    night would result in more widespread and significant flash
    flooding. For now...think there may be just enough misalignment
    between the 2 to keep any resultant flash flooding from reaching a
    High Risk category, but this could very well change, especially
    should future forecasts for Friday night correlate with where
    tonight's rains occur. Regardless, there should be enough flash
    flooding even with enough misalignment that numerous local
    instances of flash flooding are likely, and the Moderate Risk
    remains in effect.

    ...Four Corners Region...

    The already anomalous moisture in the area from Day 1 will remain
    in place across the 4 Corners, especially Colorado and Utah.
    Meanwhile a shortwave trough moving into the area out of
    California/Nevada will result in more widespread showers and
    thunderstorms, especially during peak heating Friday afternoon. The
    Slight risk area remains in place as is...namely because more of
    eastern Utah and a bit less of southwest Colorado will get the
    heaviest rains. Should this shift east and overlap with the San
    Juans of Colorado...assuming some flash flooding occurs
    today...then it's possible a further upgrade may be needed. Widely
    scattered instances of flash flooding are more likely Friday as
    compared with today due to the much improved upper level support,
    but the severity of any individual flash flooding may be reduced a
    bit in favor of the more widespread rains. Thus...the Slight
    remains solidly in place.

    ...South Texas...

    Continued east to east-southeast flow across the Gulf will bring
    any embedded convection inland into south Texas Friday. The
    convection should remain disorganized, but due to recent wet soils
    from T.S. Alberto, isolated instances of flash flooding can't be
    ruled out.

    ...Portions of the Northeast...

    A front moving south across New England and NY will support
    somewhat more organized convection Friday afternoon as the hot and
    humid air mass ahead of the front is uplifted by the front. Since
    soils across New England remain at or below normal for moisture
    content, any convection should only result in isolated flash
    flooding. The Marginal was adjusted along and south of the expected
    frontal position Friday afternoon.

    Wegman

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Sat Jun 22 2024 - 12Z Sun Jun 23 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    UPPER GREAT LAKES AND UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY...

    ...Upper Great Lakes and Upper Mississippi Valley...

    An MCS will be moving across Minnesota and Wisconsin to start the
    day Saturday morning. Heavy rain may cause flash flooding from the
    Twin Cities east Saturday morning when added to rainfall across
    Wisconsin from the overnight period. By this point however, the MCS
    should be picking up eastward speed as it moves into Wisconsin.
    Thus...rainfall amounts and flash flooding risk will decrease as
    the heavy rain moves into areas of WI and MI that are somewhat
    drier than areas to their west. Nonetheless...the MCS will remain
    intact as it moves across the area, becoming more frontal in
    structure. Strong storms will develop to its south across
    IA/IL/MO...but the more progressive and shorter lived nature of the
    storms should minimize the flash flooding threat. The Slight Risk
    highlights where the warm front/MCS causes rain to be most
    persistent before the cold front pushes all of it to the east.

    ...Deep South Texas...

    The potential for another tropical low to impact the Gulf Coast of
    Mexico could spread heavy rain north into Deep South Texas. Unlike
    Alberto, the rain with this system should be much more confined, so
    only Deep South Texas has potential for resultant flash flooding.

    ...New England and NY...

    Continued passage of upper level disturbances would result in
    another round of afternoon showers and storms that may cause
    isolated flash flooding as tropical moisture returns to the area
    from the south as the front from Day 2/Friday retreats back to the
    north.

    Wegman


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4D2hn4UvFPci7KQhj-ypLAIgFAK_ngLtGnRzOelJhT5g= 8Yftbb657aFkqRlHUo1L381vmIba5PAOzDDyXvbexj-s-vw$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4D2hn4UvFPci7KQhj-ypLAIgFAK_ngLtGnRzOelJhT5g= 8Yftbb657aFkqRlHUo1L381vmIba5PAOzDDyXvbeqUtw3bo$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!4D2hn4UvFPci7KQhj-ypLAIgFAK_ngLtGnRzOelJhT5g= 8Yftbb657aFkqRlHUo1L381vmIba5PAOzDDyXvbeK4ELSSw$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Mon Jul 15 18:12:54 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 151812 AAA
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    212 PM EDT Mon Jul 15 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 185Z Mon Jul 15 2024 - 12Z Tue Jul 16 2024

    ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR ACROSS
    PORTIONS OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS, INCLUDING THE CHICAGO METRO...

    ..1810Z Update...

    In coordination with the local Chicago WFO, a targeted upgrade to a
    Moderate Risk was made to encompass much of Northern IL, including
    the Rockford and Chicago metro areas. Previous 48 hrs have been
    impactful across the aforementioned area with locally 5-10" of
    rainfall from a succession of three MCS as they moved through the
    area. Despite the overall progressive nature of the expected
    complex later today, the antecedent conditions coupled with rates
    of 1-3"/hr over very saturated soils and flood prone urban
    corridors were enough to warrant a targeted upgrade to the MDT risk
    across that area.

    Kleebauer

    ...16Z Update Summary...

    The SLGT risk across the Midwest was expanded in all directions
    with a greater emphasis to the north, south, and east where the
    forecast track of the next convective complex will likely cause
    some enhanced flash flood issues during its progression. A MRGL
    risk was added across portions of Southern New England for isolated
    flash flood within a zone of enhanced convergence. The MRGL risk
    across the Northeast was expanded a bit further east as well to
    reflect some of the trends within the QPF field on recent CAMs as
    they have a better handle on the approaching shortwave and remnant
    MCV currently pushing through Southeast Ontario. The MRGL risk
    across the Southwest was linked and expanded somewhat to encompass
    the higher instability reflection across the region where isolated
    flash flood concerns will be plausible.

    ...Midwest through the Ohio Valley...

    Area convection within the Upper Mississippi Valley is in the
    process of weakening with some of the remnant energy expected to
    pivot southeast within the mean flow aloft. A cold front at the
    surface is analyzed over Southwest MN with a surface low expected
    to motion to the northeast into the Northern Great Lakes by the
    evening. The cold front will slide to the southeast allowing for
    increasing convergence within the confines of a building
    moist/unstable axis present between Eastern IA and points east
    encompassing most of Southern WI through Northern IL. These areas
    have been impacted significantly leading into the upcoming
    convective pattern with some remnant flooding still located within
    portions of Rockford and Chicago after the succession of 3 MCS's
    the past 48 hrs. The priming of the soils in conjunction with the
    incoming wave of convection is concerning as the threat will lean
    on the higher-end of potential impacts given the current situation.

    Convection will fire late this afternoon and quickly grow upscale
    as it moves from Eastern IA into Southern WI and Northern IL, a
    similar path to the previous complex that impacted the area last
    night. Those areas that were hit previously will maintain the SLGT
    risk from prior forecast with a higher end wording on locally
    significant impacts possible across the corridor from Rockford over
    into Chicago and the surrounding suburbs. The cold front will
    propagate south with the assistance from cold pool generation from
    the expected complex. After 00z, increasing LLJ presence will play
    a significant role in enhancing the rainfall potential within the
    confines of the boundary as the flow shifts parallel to the front
    allowing for convective training and backbuilding to occur on the
    upwind flank of the complex. This has been a consistent signature
    within the latest CAMs with the HREF blended mean QPF footprint
    depicting the potential pretty well across the IA/IL border south
    of Davenport to points east into western IN. This is a relevant
    signature given the synoptic and mesoscale evolution anticipated
    with an enhanced probability field accompanying within that zone of
    interest.

    The two primary areas will lie within that northern and southwest
    flank of the complex. Neighborhood probabilities for at least 2"
    are very high within both corridors with a solid 40-70% outline
    within both areas. The 1" EAS signatures were also more robust in
    those zones with some lighter 2" signatures in the same region.
    Considering those variables, there was enough confidence to
    maintain the SLGT risk and including some higher-end SLGT wording
    within those two corridors above. The SLGT was also expanded to the
    east over portions of Southern MI through Northern and Central IN
    as the complex will continue propagating eastward overnight with
    locally heavy rainfall in-of those areas downstream. There is a
    potential for a targeted upgrade within portions of Northern IL if
    the setup repeats or has a higher impact across the areas where
    they have been hit recently leading to greater sensitivities to
    flood concerns.

    ...Southern New England...

    A small, but fairly substantial mid-level perturbation will advect
    eastward into Southern New England from the west, entering an area
    of modest low-level convergence and sufficient surface buoyancy
    located within parts of Northern CT up through Central MA later
    this afternoon. A fairly substantial boundary layer moisture
    presence is reflected within the current observed PWATs and surface
    dew points located across all of the area. Diurnal destabilization
    and the approach of the mid-level reflection will allow for the
    development of a line of convection across the above areas, riding east-northeast within the confines of a sharp theta-E gradient
    aligned over basically the I-90 corridor. Considering the
    environment and some of the probability signals being a bit robust
    over the highlighted area. In coordination with the local BOX WFO,
    a small MRGL risk was added over portions of Southern New England,
    not including greater Boston or Southeast MA.

    Kleebauer

    ...Southwest...
    Monsoon moisture will fuel another day of afternoon showers and
    thunderstorms, with isolated flash flooding remaining a concern
    from southeastern Arizona and southwestern New Mexico into the
    Mogollon Rim. Models have been underplaying the convection
    development further to the west into southern California.
    Considering a somewhat decent signal with the SBCAPE fields off the
    recent CAMs and PWAT anomalies within the interior of SoCal and
    Southern NV, have expanded the MRGL risk and connected the
    separated risk areas to become a more uniform MRGL over the region.

    Pereira/Kleebauer

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Tue Jul 16 2024 - 12Z Wed Jul 17 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    MID MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEYS...

    ...Central Plains to the Northeast...
    As a broad upper trough begins to amplify over the Great Lakes, the
    associated surface boundary and accompanying moisture pool will
    become a focus for showers and storms and the potential for heavy
    rainfall amounts. Southwesterly inflow into the front will support
    PWs climbing upwards of 2 inches from the mid Mississippi Valley
    eastward into the Ohio Valley. This is also where the guidance
    shows the best mid-to-upper level forcing, raising the potential
    for west-to-east training storms and heavy accumulations. The
    general model consensus shows the greater threat has shifted a
    little further south and east, but is overall close to the previous
    axis. Therefore, a Slight Risk was maintained from central
    Missouri eastward to far western Pennsylvania. Some of the
    deterministic guidance do show amounts that would raise Moderate
    Risk concerns. However, given the model spread, opted not to
    include any upgrades at this point.

    While the model consensus indicates the greater threat for
    widespread moderate to heavy amounts is further east, there is a
    notable signal for locally heavy amounts developing over the
    central High Plains, especially over eastern Colorado and
    western Kansas. Mid-level energy spilling off the top of the ridge
    and interacting with upslope flow and moisture pooling along the
    western edge of the surface front will likely support storms
    developing along the high terrain before moving eastward. While
    differing in the details, most models show at least locally heavy
    rainfall amounts, raising at least isolated flash flooding
    concerns across the region.

    ...Southwest...
    Greater coverage of isolated to scattered diurnal convection is
    expected as the upper high currently in place weakens. This will
    allow more showers and storms to develop further to the north,
    extending the threat for isolated flash flooding across a greater
    portion of northern Arizona and New Mexico.

    Pereira

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Wed Jul 17 2024 - 12Z Thu Jul 18 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF
    COLORADO AND NEW MEXICO...

    ...Southwest to the central and southern Rockies...
    A Slight Risk was introduced from south-central Colorado to central
    New Mexico, where moist upslope flow will support increasing
    coverage of showers and storms and locally heavy amounts. This will
    raise the potential for flash flooding, especially across
    vulnerable areas. Guidance indicates a notable increase in low
    level moisture transport, raising PW anomalies to 1.5 standard
    deviations above normal across central New Mexico. This moisture
    along with weak flow aloft and daytime heating, is expected to
    support slow-moving storms capable of producing heavy rainfall
    rates. Vulnerable areas, including burn scars, urbanized areas, and
    areas of complex terrain will be most susceptible to flash
    flooding.

    Elsewhere, the potential for diurnal convection producing at least
    isolated concerns for heavy rainfall and flash flooding will
    continue to expand across the Southwest.

    ...Southern Plains to the Northeast...
    Widespread coverage of moderate to locally heavy amounts,
    extending from Oklahoma and northern Texas all the way to the Mid
    Atlantic and southern New England, can be expected as a cold front
    continues to drop slowly south through the central and eastern
    U.S. this period. Model spread contributed to the decision to
    maintain a broad Marginal Risk across this region for now. However,
    there are some model signals that an upgrade to a Slight Risk may
    be required across some areas at some point. This includes areas
    from eastern Oklahoma through northern Arkansas, where some of the deterministic models show heavy amounts developing as mid-level
    energy moving through the base of the trough interacts with a
    deeper moisture pool (PWs ~2 inches) along the front. Other areas
    include portions of the Ohio Valley and the Mid Atlantic, where
    there are signals for at least locally heavy amounts as well.

    Pereira

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5WFml_hDqDN6BXOYhORAlvz1BuLc0etqy6yADXZWIFXQ= 5uPfesbvJuMsoVXinppQg6aWT8FMbm3-4V_SakPuVXBTCQo$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5WFml_hDqDN6BXOYhORAlvz1BuLc0etqy6yADXZWIFXQ= 5uPfesbvJuMsoVXinppQg6aWT8FMbm3-4V_SakPuuC7aXF8$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5WFml_hDqDN6BXOYhORAlvz1BuLc0etqy6yADXZWIFXQ= 5uPfesbvJuMsoVXinppQg6aWT8FMbm3-4V_SakPuHdS9vxU$=20

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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Jul 21 08:39:00 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 210838 AAA
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    438 AM EDT Sun Jul 21 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Sun Jul 21 2024 - 12Z Mon Jul 22 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHWEST AND THE WESTERN CAROLINAS...

    ...Western Carolina's...

    General pattern persistence across the Southern Mid Atlantic will
    yield another round of scattered to widespread convection in-of
    the Carolinas with some locations setup to see a greater emphasis
    for heavy rainfall. A few weak mid-level perturbations will advect
    northeast within the mean flow, encroaching on the Piedmont of the
    Carolina's by later this morning. The coupling of increased upper
    support with a strong diurnal destabilization pattern will promote
    the threat of stronger cell cores with heavy rain potential due to
    anomalous moisture lingering along and south of the quasi-
    stationary front to the north. Recent trends within the HREF and
    associated CAMs have been for an increase in heavy rainfall for
    points along and west of I-85 where the mid-level ascent will be
    maximized along with the favored instability. Convection will
    likely fire along the terrain of the escarpment up through the
    Appalachians of NC before drifting to the east and northeast away
    from the terrain. Probabilities for locally enhanced rainfall
    exceeding 2" is very high (>70%) for much of Western NC down into
    the far Upstate portion SC to the north of GSP. There's some hints
    of upwards of 5" within the probability fields and individual CAMs
    members along the escarpment up through areas like Boone points
    east towards Greensboro. This area has seen its fair share of heavy
    rain in the past 24-48 hrs at times, so the latest FFGs are lower
    than climo. In coordination with the surrounding WFOs that bridge
    coverage in the Western Carolina's, have introduced a SLGT risk
    across the area encompassing much of the area west of the I-85
    corridor.

    ...Southwest and Southern Rockies...

    A pattern of general persistence within the mid and upper-levels
    will lead to an ongoing threat of convective development in-of the
    Southern Rockies and adjacent terrain of NM due to primed
    environmental destabilization coinciding with a progression of mid-
    level vortices streaming down the eastern flank of the ridge
    across the Western U.S. A slight weakening of the ridge will allow
    for an expansion of the convective threat to migrate westward into
    the Mogollon Rim with some deterministic output signaling some
    formidable amounts within the terrain. The primary areas of
    interest within the current SLGT will reside within the complex
    terrain and areas surrounding the remnant burn scars located within
    the Sacramento's and Sangre de Cristos. Secondary areas of focus
    include the NM Bootheel, Southeast AZ terrain around the Huachucas,
    as well as the Eastern NM High Plains into the Northwest Permian
    Basin of Texas.

    The latter of the aforementioned areas is a newer development
    within the latest ensemble means with a focus along a remnant
    outflow that bisect the Caprock down into the Permian Basin,
    outlined by a marginal theta-E gradient in place from Clines
    Corner, NM down close to I-20 around the Midland/Odessa corridor. A
    shortwave currently analyzed over CO will continue to make headway
    to the south around the eastern flank of the ridge eventually
    aiding in convective initiation across east-central NM by the
    afternoon. Multi-cell cluster of thunderstorms will congeal by
    prevailing cold pools and migrate to the southeast, riding right
    along the theta-E gradient that will maintain presence through the
    afternoon. There's a growing consensus that storms will be able to
    hold together and impact a large area encompassing the Caprock of
    Eastern NM down through the Northwest Permian Basin before
    potentially collapsing in the evening. There is a chance this holds
    together to the I-20 corridor and provides some heavier rain
    within the confines of the Midland/Odessa area, but the probability
    is lower compared to the Northwestern areas up across Southeastern
    NM up through the Caprock along the TX/NM state lines. HREF
    probabilities are highest for at least 2" within the confines
    above, including some >70% output being displayed within the
    Northwest Permian up through Lea and Roosevelt Counties in NM.
    Despite a very dry signal within the soil moisture availability
    over the region, rainfall rates in excess of 1.5"/hr will be
    plausible given the elevated moisture presence as noted within the
    latest NAEFS PWAT anomalies approaching 1-1.5 deviations above
    normal across much of Southeast NM extending southeastward into the quasi-stationary front aligned near I-10.


    The previous SLGT risk was maintained, but did allow for an eastern
    extension to account for the increasing organized convective threat
    aimed for portions of Southeastern NM down into West Texas.

    ...Oklahoma...

    A compact but well-defined surface wave will linger within the
    base of the mean trough carved out across the Mid-Mississippi
    Valley back down into the northern fringes of the Southern Plains
    in OK. Current IR satellite indicates a blossoming of convection
    over Northeastern OK this evening that will lead to some locally
    heavy rainfall close to Tulsa and surrounding locales. Hi-res
    deterministic is consistent on the surface reflection sticking
    around through the first half of the period with a short term
    degradation of the convective field after 12z, but comes back in
    earnest due to the addition of the diurnal destabilization along a
    surface trough extending near and south of the surface low. Signals
    for increasing low-level convergence within the confines of low
    are present within several CAMs outputs later this morning and
    afternoon leading to a narrow corridor of heavy rain that could see
    totals breach 4" within a short period of time. The main threat is
    confined within the small circulation with the northern fringes of
    the low being the prime focus for where modest training could
    occur. There's a small footprint within the ensemble means of 2+"
    just south of the Tulsa metro with accompanying neighborhood
    probabilities of >5" up between 25-40% in the same area. Whether
    that's the exact location or not, the areal extent of flash flood
    concerns is small due to the compact nature of the setup. A MRGL
    risk was maintained from previous forecast, but want to make
    mention the threat could trend towards more locally significant
    impacts where the training convective pattern establishes itself.
    Look for future MPD's on the threat as we move towards the late
    morning and early afternoon hours.

    Kleebauer


    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Mon Jul 22 2024 - 12Z Tue Jul 23 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES, TEXAS THROUGH THE ARKLATEX...

    ...Southern Plains...

    A quasi-stationary front will bisect much of the state of Texas
    with a westward extension into the Southwest TX terrain back
    through the Big Bend, Edwards Plateau, Hill Country, all the way
    out to the ArklaTex. Mid-level energy from the northwest will
    navigate southeast towards the higher terrain south of I-20,
    migrating slowly eastward within the confines of the front. The
    added upper forcing in conjunction with the increasing low-level
    convergence along the stationary front will induce a swath of
    stronger thunderstorms capable of significant rainfall within any
    cell core. Latest NAEFS PWAT anomalies signals a solid +2
    deviations from climo for the moisture field present across much of
    the central portions of TX back into the Stockton Plateau. Cell
    initiation across the higher terrain out west will lead to
    convective clustering with outflow generation stemming from areal
    thunderstorm coverage, eventually propagating to the east into the
    I-35 corridor in Central TX by later Monday afternoon and evening.
    Precip totals within the initial cell development are generally
    between 1-2", but some higher totals exceeding 4" will be possible
    across the Lower Trans Pecos through the Southern Edwards Plateau.
    The heaviest core of precip will lie within the eastern extent of
    the Edwards Plateau across into Hill Country until it reaches the
    I-35 corridor near Austin/San Antonio. This is where ensemble mean
    QPF has been the most consistent for totals exceeding 2" with
    indications of up to 3" in areal average QPF within Hill Country
    and individual deterministic output exceeding 6" in places hit with
    repeated cells. Mean storm motions within the confines of the
    boundary are weak meaning slow moving convective clusters with
    rainfall rates between 2-3"/hr are possible along that frontal
    boundary. The SLGT risk from previous forecast was maintained but
    expanded to the west to include more of the Stockton Plateau given
    the latest trends within the mean QPF and favorable environment
    over the area leading into the evolving event.

    Further to the northeast through Northeast TX into the ArklaTex,
    energy from the southwest will eventually advect northeastward with
    convective generation during the afternoon and evening hours
    becoming more organized with the additional upper support. Some
    cell clusters will be capable of locally heavy rainfall extending
    along the stationary front with some convective training plausible
    due to similar conditions from upstream. Totals are not as prolific
    within the means across the above region, but some totals of 2-4"
    are not out of the question, so felt there was no reason to make
    significant adjustments to the previously inherited SLGT risk.

    ...Southwest and Southern Rockies...

    Scattered thunderstorms will develop once again within the confines
    of the Sangre de Cristos with highest impacts situated over the
    complex terrain and any burn scars within the mountain chain.
    Totals are not expected to be as prolific compared to recent days
    with less of a favorable mid-level pattern and lower SBCAPE
    forecast. Regardless, considering the expected convective
    development and the very sensitive nature of the flash flooding
    potential within the burn scars, there was enough merit to continue
    the focused SLGT risk across the Mountains with an extension down
    into the Sacramento's due to the ongoing issues caused by the burn
    scarring near Ruidoso. This is a lower end SLGT risk threshold with
    impact based reasoning for the risk continuity.

    Across the rest of the Southwestern U.S, the upper pattern will
    shift to have less ridge potency leading to an expansion of the
    convective risks a bit further west to include the Lower Colorado
    River valley between CA/AZ/NV. The best threat will still be across
    the Mogollon Rim where scattered thunderstorm coverage will likely
    spawn some totals exceeding 1" within a short period of time along
    the terrain of central AZ. The coverage and moisture anomalies were
    not primed enough to warrant an upgrade at this time, but the
    threat is still a mid to higher end MRGL risk, on the cusp of a
    potential upgrade if the setup becomes more pronounced within the
    means.

    ...Southeast to Southern Mid Atlantic...

    Persistent surface front bisecting much of the Southeastern U.S up
    through the Southern Mid Atlantic will continue the threat of
    scattered thunderstorms capable of locally heavy rainfall with some
    training prospects within the confines of the quasi-stationary
    boundary. The QPF footprint is a shotgun of small QPF maxima
    reflective of the potential with less of any organized threat and
    more of a widespread convective pattern that favors some locally
    greater impacts, but remaining on the low to middle grounds of the
    MRGL threshold. The one area of note for a potentially more
    impactful setup is across the Central Mid Atlantic where a stronger
    shortwave will advect northeast out of the Carolina's with
    increased upper forcing traversing the DC/Baltimore metro area
    during the middle of peak diurnal instability. Recent deterministic
    output is a bit more robust compared to recent forecasts and is in
    agreement with the ML output based within the GFS Graphcast and
    ECMWF AIFS. It will be interesting to see the trends as we move
    into the CAMs window because there could be a targeted SLGT risk
    within the urban corridor if the signal holds. A MRGL risk is in
    effect, but will be monitoring closely.

    Kleebauer


    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Tue Jul 23 2024 - 12Z Wed Jul 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
    TEXAS...

    ...Southern Plains...

    A repeat of heavy convection across TX is forecast as the quasi-
    stationary front within deep moisture anomalies remains parked
    across much of Central and Eastern TX. Latest ensemble bias
    corrected QPF is signaling an additional 2-3" possible within the
    I-35 corridor with some scattered heavy rain signals all the way
    back into the Central RGV from Del Rio down towards Laredo. Weak
    mean storm motions and rates likely pushing 2-3"/hr will allow for
    more significant flooding potential over areas that will have been
    hit the prior period. In fact, 48-hr QPF could top 6" in spots
    within the two successive periods which would allow for significant
    issues to arise if it falls across the I-35 corridor. A SLGT risk
    was maintained and expanded across the western flank of the risk
    area to account for trends in the ensemble QPF footprint and better
    instability fields located out towards the RGV. If the previous
    period ends up with more significant impacts, this could lead to an
    upgrade in the forecast risk over portions of Central TX.


    ...Southern Rockies and Southwest...

    Monsoonal convection will encompass much of the Southwest U.S with
    primary coverage in the Great Basin as the mid-level ridge pattern
    shifts focus to the west of the Four Corners. Modest moisture
    anomalies and relatively formidable instability across much of the
    region will allow for scattered thunderstorms with isolated heavy
    rain cores that could spell issues if they fall along complex
    terrain, burn scars, urban footprints, and slot canyons. A MRGL
    risk is in effect across much of the climatologically favored
    areas in the Southwestern Monsoon.

    ...Upper Midwest...

    Shortwave trough moving through the Great Lakes will allow for the
    initiation of organized convection as it pivots through the region.
    Modest instability and moisture anomalies in the confines of the
    Lakes will lead to some scattered heavy rain signals as the
    disturbance traverses the area. The progressive nature of the
    system will limit widepsread flash flooding concerns, but a few
    isolated heavier cores could pose some issues for more urbanized
    areas across Northern and Central WI into the Michigan UP. A low-
    end MRGL is in effect for the above area.

    Kleebauer

    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5wYO0Qg-nf2zBennJJM14qRe-ja4ilU6NcKcszeevB_s= fki5WQfl2haoS6S1PzkleocmkrOq79PmvtBGDE3FM0hpmkk$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5wYO0Qg-nf2zBennJJM14qRe-ja4ilU6NcKcszeevB_s= fki5WQfl2haoS6S1PzkleocmkrOq79PmvtBGDE3FPCbhygA$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!5wYO0Qg-nf2zBennJJM14qRe-ja4ilU6NcKcszeevB_s= fki5WQfl2haoS6S1PzkleocmkrOq79PmvtBGDE3FEl_lGkA$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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  • From COD Weather Processor@1:2320/105 to wx-storm@lists.illinois.edu on Sun Sep 22 03:40:36 2024
    FOUS30 KWBC 220340 AAA
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion...UPDATED
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    1140 PM EDT Sat Sep 21 2024

    Day 1
    Valid 0328Z Sun Sep 22 2024 - 12Z Sun Sep 22 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    03Z Special Excessive Rainfall Discussion...
    Special Excessive Rainfall Outlook sent at 0324Z to include a
    Marginal risk area over parts of southeast Pennsylvania and the
    Delmaeva due to a cluster of storms over Pennsylvania that were=20
    producing rainfall rates approaching 2 inches per hour in=20
    spots...with convection expected to continue building southeastward
    along a warm/moist axis. Refer to Mesoscale Precipitation=20
    Discussion 1041 for additional details.

    Also made a few minor adjustments to the Southern Plains based on
    latest satellite and radar trends. Overall...changes were minor.

    Bann

    ...New Mexico into Texas/Oklahoma Panhandles...

    ...0100 UTC Update...
    Few changes made to the Slight and Marginal Risk areas based on the
    latest observational and mesoanalysis trends, along with the recent
    HRRR and HREF guidance.

    The large- scale flow across the southern Great Basin will
    continue to draw moisture northward at the low levels while
    becoming increasingly diffluent aloft in response to the approach
    of an upper low moving across the Four Corners this morning.
    Precipitable water values are forecast to exceed 1.5 inches across
    parts of West Texas by late afternoon while the right entrance
    region of an upper level jet rounds the base of an upper trough and
    tracks over the region. This combination should help support
    multi-cell storms capable of producing isolated rainfall rates of
    an inch or more and storm total rainfall amounts in excess of 2
    inches over portions of northeastern New Mexico into the Texas
    Panhandle during the afternoon or evening hours with an associated
    risk of flash flooding. 12Z CAMs have honed in on northeastern NM
    into the OK/TX Panhandles while decreasing any heavier rainfall
    threat north of the KS border, and have thus trimmed the northern
    part of the MRGL and SLGT risk areas a bit.

    ...Mid-Atlantic...
    Non-zero threat of isolated/urban flash flood threat for northern
    and central PA, along with central-southern VA this evening with
    clusters of convection moving slowly to the south. Convective
    trends should be on the downswing between 01-03Z given the negative
    MUCAPE trends. Nevertheless, MLCAPEs around 1000+ J/Kg early, owing
    partially to mid level lapse rates ~6.5 C/KM, along with transient
    upper shortwave energy/left exit region upper jet forcing will
    maintain a non-zero flash flood threat through midnight. Given the
    latest guidance, progression of the convection, and mesoanalysis
    trends, opted to not hoist a Marginal Risk for what will be a
    short term, non-zero (widely localized) flash flood risk.

    Hurley/Fracasso/Bann

    Day 2
    Valid 12Z Sun Sep 22 2024 - 12Z Mon Sep 23 2024

    ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF
    THE MID MISSISSIPPI VALLEY TO THE SOUTHERN HIGH PLAINS...

    20Z update...Nudged the Slight Risk area over MO/IL southward per
    recent 12Z guidance (and typical north bias in convective axes).
    Otherwise, CAM guidance supports maintaining the SLGT over TX and
    the larger MRGL outline encompassing both areas, within the broad
    SW flow aloft and near/ahead of the frontal boundary.

    Fracasso

    The focus for areas of heavy rainfall will continue to be along a
    plume of deeper moisture...precipitable water values generally at
    or above 1,75 inches...from the western portion of Texas
    northeastward to where it begins to encounter a cold front moving
    in from the northern United States. An upper level shortwave trough
    over the central and southern Rockies on Sunday morning will eject
    eastward during the day...aiding the formation of storms over parts
    of western Texas capable of heavy downpours around the time of
    maximum heating. Farther to the east...model guidance tends to
    generate at least some convection capable of producing isolated 2
    to 3 inch rainfall amounts over portions of Missouri as moisture
    flux convergence occurs ahead of a cold front pushing southward.
    Mesoscale guidance...available through the first 12 hours of the
    Day 2 period for the overnight EROs...does show low-end potential
    for 2 inch per hour rates embedded within a broader area where
    probabilities of 1 inch per hour rates are on the order of 10 to 25
    pct. There was already a Slight Risk introduced here and only
    needed a bit of realignment to fit the latest guidance.

    Bann

    Day 3
    Valid 12Z Mon Sep 23 2024 - 12Z Tue Sep 24 2024

    ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER A PORTION OF
    THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY EASTWARD INTO THE OHIO VALLEY...

    20Z update...Maintained the MRGL outline for the MS to Ohio Valley
    region, with a shift a bit southwestward per trends in the guidance
    favoring a bit slower progression. ML first guess fields still show
    just a MRGL for now, with more clarity (hopefully) with some CAM
    guidance in the next update or two.

    Fracasso

    As the large scale upper trough continues to move eastward on
    Monday...the plume of available moisture gets elongated and the
    moisture flux along the front becomes less well defined. There will
    be some broader upper support along the front which will have taken
    on a more east-west orientation...so there is at least some
    potential for problems from run off with 1 to 2 inches or rainfall
    over portions of Illinois into Indiana. But with convection
    expected to become increasingly elevated and with flash flood
    guidance tending to be 2.5 inches per hour or greater...will
    maintain a Marginal Risk area for now and evaluate the need for an
    upgrade if rates/amounts pick up in later model cycles.

    Bann


    Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9VVUw4syyZeCI8ZDlbZo38i_jMpb1LYbBpFGLXCq4EPv= yMlHBiS1vSfHjNm6oR-LkFgfO_JpgbXI8dJCiy9YNljfbc0$=20
    Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9VVUw4syyZeCI8ZDlbZo38i_jMpb1LYbBpFGLXCq4EPv= yMlHBiS1vSfHjNm6oR-LkFgfO_JpgbXI8dJCiy9Yukww_Nw$=20
    Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go= v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!9VVUw4syyZeCI8ZDlbZo38i_jMpb1LYbBpFGLXCq4EPv= yMlHBiS1vSfHjNm6oR-LkFgfO_JpgbXI8dJCiy9YaKraiGg$=20

    =3D =3D =3D
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