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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfa |
July 8, 2024 8:29 AM * |
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FOUS30 KWBC 080838 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 438 AM EDT Mon Jul 8 2024 Day 1 Valid 12Z Mon Jul 08 2024 - 12Z Tue Jul 09 2024 ...THERE IS A MODERATE RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MOST OF EASTERN TEXAS... The National Hurricane Center anticipates Hurricane Beryl to make landfall near Matagorda Beach early this morning and continue to track northward. It is expected to be a fairly compact storm as it tracks through eastern Texas so the QPF gradient will be somewhat tight with its 3 to 8 inches swath slightly east of the track with local maximums possibly approaching 15 inches. The shift in Beryl's track resulted in an east and northward adjustment to all of the inherited Excessive Rainfall Outlook areas. The Moderate Risk spans from Brazosport Area to south of Lake Calcasieu and northward into southwest Arkansas. The Slight Risk spans from Matagorda Bay to west of Vermilion Bay and northward into central Arkansas. The Marginal Risk spans from San Antonio Bay to Atchafalaya Bay and from the Texas Panhandle to Southern Missouri. Tropical moisture from Beryl into a cold frontal boundary draped over the Southern Plains should focus scattered heavy rainfall over much of Oklahoma into the Texas Panhandle. ...Southeast... Convection in proximity to the lingering frontal boundary will persist across the Southeast. PW values on the order of +2 to +3 standard deviations will be pooled over the region and will bolster rainfall efficiency. Recent rains have increased soil saturation levels and with additional showers and thunderstorms expected the threat for isolated flooding concerns will remain elevated for this part of the country. The latest guidance trended higher with the thunderstorm potential and QPF amounts across portions of northeast/central Florida. The Marginal Risk area was expanded south to account for this trend and new WPC forecast. Campbell Day 2 Valid 12Z Tue Jul 09 2024 - 12Z Wed Jul 10 2024 ...THERE ARE SLIGHT RISKS FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS THE MIDDLE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY AND PORTIONS OF THE LOUISIANA COAST... ...Mississippi Valley and Midwest... Beryl is still expected to quickly phase with an upper trough and surface front to the north while in transition to being extra tropical. This should lead to the potential for heavy rain to blanket part of the central U.S. causing flash flooding concerns from Arkansas to Indiana during this period. Some of the highest QPF amounts of 3+ inches are likely to focus over the Ozarks region and points northeast to the Illinois/Indiana border. Areal averages are expected to be around 2 to 4 inches with local maximums upwards of 8 inches. A Slight Risk extends from central Arkansas to western Indiana. A Marginal Risk stretches from the central Gulf Coast northward to southern Michigan. Again, an future adjustments will likely be dependent on the track for Beryl. In addition, some of the CAMs hint that some type of southwest to northeast band could set up along or just inland of south-central Louisiana coast to produce a few inches of rain over some areas that could be a little more sensitive to heavy rain impacts. A Slight Risk area was raised for this stretch of the coastline north to about I-10. ...Southwest... Monsoonal moisture feeds over eastern Arizona through the southern Rockies warranting maintenance of the Marginal Risk for most of New Mexico, southeast Arizona into southern Colorado with particularly considerations for burn scars and areas that have seen ample rainfall recently. ...Southeast... Convection will persist during this period thanks to the abundant moisture hanging around and diurnal forcing. Some of the guidance continues to suggest areas of locally heavy rainfall especially along the eastern coastline of Florida. General consensus suggests 1 to 2 inches although local maximums of 3 to 4+ inches will certainly possible. A Marginal Risk remains in effect for portions of central/northern Florida and southeast Georgia. ...Northeast... Interaction of moisture ahead of Beryl and a front settling over the Mid-Atlantic/southern New England may favor heavy rainfall potential over this region; although guidance is rather light with activity mainly in New England. Some focus of the convective rain ahead of the front(s) and sufficient instability for heavy rain rates in the northern Mid-Atlantic to Northeast favor of a Marginal Risk. Campbell Day 3 Valid 12Z Wed Jul 10 2024 - 12Z Thu Jul 11 2024 ...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE GREAT LAKES REGION AND THE NORTHEAST... ...Midwest to Northeast... There is still a fair amount of spread in the guidance with respect to the evolution/track for post-tropical Beryl and exactly how this upper level energy ejects into the overall Great Lakes/Midwest mean trough. The flow of tropical moisture should bring the highest precipitable water anomalies into the Lower Great Lakes and Northeast during this period. Some PWAT anomalies within this region will likely exceed the 90th percentile and west- east oriented fronts north/east of post- tropical Beryl may promote training. The exact location of the heaviest rainfall will be dependent on the location of the frontal boundary but there is a growing signal for a broad area to be impacted by the heavy rains. A Slight Risk is in effect from northern Indiana to New Hampshire while a Marginal Risk area spans from Illinois to Maine. As details resolve and get closer in time, there may be the need to upgrade the risk level, but at this time there is too much uncertainty. ...Central Rockies and portions of the Southwest... Continuation of the monsoonal moisture and diurnal heating will keep convection possible across portions of the Central and Southern Rockies and southwest New Mexico during this period. The inherited Marginal Risk was maintained with westward modification for New Mexico. Rain in proximity to burn scars and other sensitive areas that have seen ample rainfall recently will have an elevated risk for flash flooding. Campbell --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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