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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | Heavy Rain/Flooding GA/SC |
July 1, 2024 2:25 PM * |
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AWUS01 KWNH 011810 FFGMPD SCZ000-FLZ000-GAZ000-020000- Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0533 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 210 PM EDT Mon Jul 01 2024 Areas affected...Coastal Georgia and South Carolina... Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible Valid 011810Z - 020000Z SUMMARY...Very deep moisture and slow thunderstorms along the coast to produce 2.5"/hr, spots of 3-5", and possible rapid inundation flooding through the evening. DISCUSSION...18z surface analysis depicts a slowly sagging cold front across the NC/SC border connecting to a weak surface wave/inverted trough across West-central GA just west of Macon. South of the boundary, very high theta-E air with mid to upper 70s Tds and temperatures starting to near the mid to upper 80s, spots of 90+F. Total moisture through depth ranges from 2.1 to 2.5" and SBCAPEs of 2500-3500 J/kg from CHS into S GA. Deep warm layer between 14-15Kft and given parameters will allow for efficient rainfall production/tropical showers capable of 2.5"+/hr. Aloft, GOES-E WV shows the split in upper-level flow in the col along the eastern edge of the large scale ridge across the central Gulf states. This is weakening mid-level steering flow to allow for very slow cell motions and propagation vectors to near zero at or along the GA/SC coastline. Yet, effective bulk shear given directional shear should support some minor organization to convective cells allowing for increased duration for multiple up/down convective cycles before forward propagation would occur. As such, a weak low to mid-level circulation is spinning up in across S central GA, leading to streamline convergence across SE GA as well. Frictional convergence and onshore flow/moisture flux may further lock convection to coastal regions to support increased rainfall duration. As such, spots of 3-5" are becoming more likely particularly further north along the central SC coast (proximity to the front) and northeast GA. This is supported by recent HRRR solutions as well as 17z WoFS; with 50th percentile around 3.5" and 90th percentile over 6". As such, there is increasing confidence of 3-5" totals along the coast which may result in spots of possible rapid inundation flooding. Gallina ATTN...WFO...CHS...ILM...JAX... ATTN...RFC...SERFC...NWC... LAT...LON 33607902 33407895 32937934 31878086 30918145 30668251 31058264 31818204 32678138 33078076 33268021 33507975 33587949 --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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