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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
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Mike Powell | All | HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfa |
June 28, 2025 10:36 AM * |
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FOUS30 KWBC 280829 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 429 AM EDT Sat Jun 28 2025 Day 1 Valid 12Z Sat Jun 28 2025 - 12Z Sun Jun 29 2025 ...THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE PLAINS INTO THE MID ATLANTIC/NORTHEAST US... ...Northern Plains and Upper Midwest... Showers and thunderstorms capable of producing locally heavy rainfall rates and heavy rainfall totals have the potential to produce flash flooding as the next upper shortwave trough approaches. Aided by a 90kt upper level jet streak on the lee side...the upper trough will generate a compact area of fairly robust, transient deep-layer forcing over the outlook area later today and tonight. MUCAPEs are expected to soar within the warm sector prior to the surface cold frontal passage. Given precipitable water values getting near 1.75 inches...storms which form within the unstable airmass will be capable of producing rainfall rates in excess 1.5 inches per hour and areal average rainfall amounts of 1 to 3 inches...especially once low- level inflow accelerates to between 30 kts and 40kts at 850 mb ahead of the approaching front. The storm/mesoscale nature of the threat leads to uncertainty of a more focused corridor of higher risk, but a Slight Risk may still be necessary...particularly over the Upper Mississippi Valley...if trends remain consistent. ...Mississippi Valley to the Mid Atlantic/Northeast... There continues to be an increasing concern for heavy to potentially excessive rainfall to develop across western Pennsylvania and surrounding areas as the frontal boundary sags southward and taps into the pooled PW values of 1.5-2 inches and as weak mid-level shortwave energy aids convective development in a high CAPE/weak flow environment over portions of the Mid- Mississippi Valley into the upper Ohio Valley. Farther north, maintained the Marginal Risk to account for the possibility that some of the convective activity across southeastern Canada north of the warm front clips portions of northern New England. While guidance indicates the potential for 1-2" of rainfall totals across the region, the less robust convection on the northern side of the front should keep any flooding issues isolated. ...Southeast to adjacent southern Plains... Scattered pulse thunderstorms are expected across a broad warm sector as seasonable instability develops with daytime heating from the Southeast and into the adjacent southern Plains. High precipitable water values (at or above 2 inches, some 2 standard deviations above the climatological mean for this time of year) will once again lead to highly efficient rain rates of 1-2" per hour, possibly as high as 3" per hour, which is more than enough to lead to isolated flash flooding concerns despite the generally limited thunderstorm duration. With a signal that has persisted several runs...introduced a Marginal risk area over parts of the Florida peninsula for late day convection that fires along a weak convergence boundary. ...New Mexico... Yet another day of thunderstorms is expected across portions of southern New Mexico and west Texas with locally heavy rainfall (1-2" |
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