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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
Mike Powell | All | Heavy Rain/Flooding SC TX |
July 23, 2024 9:08 AM * |
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AWUS01 KWNH 231202 FFGMPD TXZ000-231800- Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0705 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 801 AM EDT Tue Jul 23 2024 Areas affected...Portions of the TX Hill Country and adjacent areas of South-Central TX Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely Valid 231200Z - 231800Z SUMMARY...Clusters of slow-moving showers and thunderstorms with very heavy rainfall rates this morning will maintain a rather strong likelihood of flash flooding across portions of south-central TX, including parts of the TX Hill Country. DISCUSSION...The latest GOES-E IR satellite imagery shows a rather impressive convective complex over portions of south-central TX, including parts of the TX Hill Country. Very slow-moving area of showers and thunderstorms make up this convective mass with cloud tops that are as cold as -65C. The environment where the convection is occurring is quite moist with a weak to moderately buoyant airmass in place. MLCAPE values of 1000 to 1500 J/kg are in place with PWs of 2.0 to 2.2 inches based on the early morning GPS-derived PW data. This is all pooled along a quasi-stationary front draped generally southwest to northeast across the region which is also helping to yield an axis of low-level frontal convergence. Coinciding with this set-up is the proximity of a mid-level trough that is seen in GOES IR/WV imagery digging southeastward down across the southern Plains, and this is favoring a rather divergent flow pattern aloft which is yielding deeper layer ascent and helping to further support a low-level response with convergent flow into the front. There has been some subtle increase in the boundary layer instability over the last few hours with 3-hour MLCAPE differentials over south-central TX (north and west of Uvalde) of +200 to + 400 J/kg and this has been coinciding more recently with additional cloud-top cooling with the convection northeast of Del Rio. Expect the ongoing convective mass to persist this morning and continue to be slow-moving with very heavy rainfall rates that may reach 2 to 3 inches/hour with the stronger cores. A gradual movement off to the east-southeast is expected. By midday, a sufficient cold pool may evolve out of the activity to force some acceleration of the convection off to the south and east, but until then, the slow cell-motions will likely yield some very heavy rainfall totals. The 06Z HREF and recent runs of the HRRR guidance suggest additional rainfall totals of 3 to 5 inches at least locally going through midday. The antecedent conditions across the region are already rather moist from recent rainfall, and this will encourage an elevated runoff threat with the additional totals. Additional flash flooding is likely, and some of it may be locally considerable to severe. This will include concerns for some of the urban locations as well. Orrison ATTN...WFO...EWX...FWD...SJT... ATTN...RFC...WGRFC...NWC... LAT...LON 31379714 30799676 29989748 29289887 28910034 29250090 29750100 30270060 30799981 31269839 --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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