• Heavy Rain/Flood Gulf Coa

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Tuesday, November 19, 2024 10:21:00
    AWUS01 KWNH 191344
    FFGMPD
    FLZ000-ALZ000-MSZ000-LAZ000-191900-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 1158
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    843 AM EST Tue Nov 19 2024

    Areas affected...Eastern LA...Southern MS...Southern AL...Far
    Western FL Panhandle...

    Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding possible

    Valid 191345Z - 191900Z

    SUMMARY...Highly anomalous deep moisture and strength of flux
    allowing for efficient rainfall production with progressive
    pre-frontal trough. Embedded slower moving rotating updrafts will
    enhanced localized rainfall totals of 3-5" resulting in possible
    flash flooding.

    DISCUSSION...GOES-E WV suite depicts a large scale closed low
    dominating the northern Plains with negative tilt lower scale wave
    moving through the western Great Lakes, this is driving a very
    strong mid to upper level jet across the Mississippi Valley which
    in turn is spurring an very broad and strong low-level jet out of
    the Tropics into the central Gulf of Mexico intersecting the
    central Gulf Coast. CIRA LPW shows nose of 1-1.25" surface to
    850mb starting to near the southern TN boarder while as broad as
    central LA to western FL Panhandle. Combined with 40-45kts of
    southerly 850mb winds and 60-90 degrees of directional
    convergence; brings moisture flux values into the 99th and maximum
    percentile rankings over a vast area of the Deep South.

    An embedded shortwave/inflection can be analyzed through depth
    across S MS at the broad left entrance of the 120kt polar jet
    across AR/N MS, but also a weak diffluence region across S MS/AL
    in the wake of an exiting sub-tropical jet streak that is rounding
    the downstream large scale ridge into the Southern Appalachians.
    So while the height-falls are driving the cold front forward,
    there is weak surface to 850mb wave in S MS that is backing
    low-level flow and increasing flux convergence in that region, as
    well as further upstream in the coldest tops/highest unstable air
    across the mouth of the MS River and northern Gulf of Mexico. The
    instability gradient is along the Gulf Coast and as a result
    strongest cells/tops to -83C have been measure and with moisture
    values of 2.5-2.75", rates of 3"+/hr are possible across SE LA for
    the next hour or so. Near the surface inflection, weaker
    instability but solid flux convergence and increased bulk shear
    will allow for short-term efficient rainfall production to 2"/hr;
    with the vast majority falling in a sub-hourly manner given
    forward progress. This should result in possible flash flooding
    for urban and prone areas across E LA into S MS/S AL over the next
    few hours as the pre-frontal convergence zone slides east.

    As the morning progresses, bulk shear values increase over 40kts
    along and east of the inflection as it slides slower to the east
    in the further enhancing right entrance (increasing to 130-140kts)
    300mb jet. This will slow the frontal zone as well, and allow for
    some modest/weak instability to build back west to the boundary.
    Embedded rotating updrafts have a higher probability of occurring
    and with backed/increased directional moisture flux and reduced
    forward speed/propagation... downdrafts with capability to produce
    2.5-3"/hr rates may occur. Recent HRRR and 00z Hi-Res CAMs hint
    at this solution across the lower 2-3 rows of counties in
    MS/AL...combine this localized increase of 2-4" with the preceding
    progressive but intense showers on the pre-frontal trough and
    localized 3-5" totals become increasingly possible. Given the
    bulk of unstable air remains offshore, there is some reduction in
    confidence that updrafts will be strong enough to overcome the
    increased bulk shear to support these increased rates. However,
    the potential remains and would be the most likely driver to
    potential flash flooding events even into rural areas where FFG
    values of 3-4"/3hrs are more representative of soil conditions.
    As such, flash flooding is considered possible through the morning
    into early afternoon.

    Gallina

    ATTN...WFO...BMX...JAN...LIX...MOB...TAE...

    ATTN...RFC...LMRFC...SERFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 32648645 32208539 30938530 30128581 30188632
    30098773 29628864 29068883 28878931 29139023
    30578966 31758890 32518776

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (21:1/175)