• D1 5/5 RISK Excess Rainfa

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Apr 3 14:26:00 2025
    FOUS30 KWBC 031909
    QPFERD

    Excessive Rainfall Discussion
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    309 PM EDT Thu Apr 3 2025

    Day 1
    Valid 12Z Thu Apr 03 2025 - 12Z Fri Apr 04 2025

    ...THERE IS A HIGH RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE
    LOWER TO MID-MISSISSIPPI VALLEYS WITH MAJOR FLOODING EXPECTED...

    ..A PROLONGED LIFE-THREATENING FLASH FLOOD EVENT WILL CONTINUE
    TODAY WITH HEAVY RAINFALL IMPACTING A LARGE PORTION OF THE LOWER
    MISSISSIPPI AND OHIO VALLEY'S ONCE AGAIN...

    ...16Z Outlook Update...
    The overall forecast philosophy is on track and only minor spatial
    adjustments have been made to categorical areas. The High Risk
    areas remains in place across portions of Arkansas, Tennessee, and
    Kentucky, where a nearly stationary frontal boundary should linger
    throughout the day and foster multile rounds of deep convection.
    12Z model QPFs suggest another 2-4 inches of rainfall generally
    from Little Rock northeastward through south-central Kentucky, with
    much of that rain falling on sensitive ground conditions (low to
    near-zero FFGs) from prior rainfall and flood impacts last night
    and this morning. Significant impacts remain possible, with the
    only lingering uncertainty for convective coverage tied to
    gradually rising geopotential heights from this afternoon onward.
    Little Rock metro was added to the High Risk area after
    consultation with WFO LZK, with ongoing high-water impacts
    continuing as of this discussion issuance.

    The Slight Risk area was expanded eastward into more of West
    Virginia, southeastern Kentucky, and Middle Tennessee for this
    outlook. Portions of West Virginia have experienced impacts from
    heavy rainfall already this morning, and an extensive fetch of
    moderate to heavy rainfall is expected to persist much of the day
    given renewed convective development across the Mid-South per
    latest radar mosaic imagery.

    Lastly, Marginal risk areas were maintained across 1) west Texas
    for overnight redevelopment of convection in areas that experienced
    heavy rainfall this morning and 2) expanded into the
    Philadelphia/New York City and adjacent areas for banded/training
    convective potential in the 08-12Z timeframe. A quick 0.5-1.25 inch
    of rainfall is possible across urban areas of the I-95 corridor,
    which could pose a few runoff issues.

    See the previous discussion below for more information.

    Cook

    ...Previous Discussion...

    Significant rainfall over the past 12-24 hrs will only add to the
    favor of widespread flash flooding later this afternoon and evening
    as the next round of heavy rainfall occurs as the next surface wave
    rides up the quasi-stationary boundary in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. Widespread 2-4" of rain with
    maxima between 5-6" has fallen this evening across a zone spanning
    from southern Arkansas up through western Tennessee and Kentucky
    leading to several flash flood warnings as the first surface wave
    lifts north. Some overturning of the atmosphere is anticipated by
    morning with areal theta_e's decreasing across areas north of the
    Ohio River and a tightening instability gradient positioned along
    and south of the quasi-stationary front nestled from southwest to
    northeast over the Mississippi Valley. Despite some limiting
    factors early on, small mid-level perturbations embedded within the
    mean flow will still cause some scattered light to moderate
    convective development through the morning and afternoon leading to
    a continuation of priming from the prior evening.

    The nocturnal period will once again become the main period of
    interest as the nocturnal LLJ kicks back in across the Deep South
    and banks into the stationary front bisecting the Mississippi and
    southern Ohio Valley. The same areas that saw the significant rain
    and flash flooding this evening will be hit once again with another
    wave of convection that will initiate across the ArklaTex and
    southern Arkansas and eventually move northeast as the flow aligns
    parallel to the stationary front. Additional precip totals of 2-4"
    with local to 6" will once again be in the cards for much of
    Arkansas, western Tennessee, and southwestern Kentucky which will
    ultimately put 48-hr totals between 4-8" with locally up to 10"
    during the time frame. Local FFG's are already very low after
    today's precip with much of the corridor spanning eastern AR up
    through north-central KY exhibiting 1 and 3-hr FFG intervals
    running below 1/1.5" respectively. 00z HREF is very much indicating
    that rainfall rates during the peak of diurnal convection will
    reside within that 1-2"/hr marker with FFG exceedance probabilities
    above 50% for the 1/3/6-hr intervals in place. Neighborhood
    probabilities for >3" total are between 40-60% across eastern AR
    with as high as 60-80% over northwest TN and southwestern KY. >5"
    neighborhood probs are running between 25-40% within the same
    corridor, backed up by EAS probs >2" sufficiently above 50% along
    the Mississippi north of Memphis to points northeast.

    Despite the overall output being slightly lower than what occurred
    this evening, the prescience has been set for significant flood
    potential given the already saturated soils, expected rates, and
    regional rivers running high from the previous period of rainfall.
    The previous High Risk inherited was generally maintained with
    small adjustments accounting for recent rainfall trends, updated
    FFG's, and encompassing elevated probabilities from both the hi-res
    and national ensemble blends. A Moderate Risk still in effect for
    a large area surrounding the High Risk in place across the Lower to Mid-Mississippi Valley with a span that covers areas of southwest
    Arkansas up to as far northeast as Cincinnati.

    This is quickly becoming a high-end flash flood scenario with
    another day or two of rainfall expected on top of what has occurred
    and what will occur. If you lie within a flood plane or any area
    that is prone to flash flooding across Arkansas, western Tennessee,
    and western Kentucky, you will want to pay close attention and
    have a plan to seek higher ground, if possible.

    Kleebauer

    $$
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