Subj : HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfa To : All From : Mike Powell Date : Wed Sep 06 2023 06:23:00 FOUS30 KWBC 060750 QPFERD Excessive Rainfall Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 349 AM EDT Wed Sep 06 2023 Day 1 Valid 12Z Wed Sep 06 2023 - 12Z Thu Sep 07 2023 ....THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL OVER PORTIONS OF THE GREAT LAKES AND ALSO THE ARKLAMISS/MID-SOUTH/MIDDLE TENNESSEE... ....Great Lakes... Mid-level shortwave entering WI this morning will continue eastward with a preceding cold front and surface low. Air mass remains well-saturated with dew points in the mid-60s to near 70F over Wisconsin into Michigan early this morning with precipitable water values around 1.75 inches (+2 to +2.5 sigma). CAM guidance indicates enough instability to support some localized 1-2"/hr rainfall rates over northeastern WI into the U.P. of Michigan as the system moves through, near the flash flood guidance values. By late this afternoon, the system will shift into Canada and lose its moisture connection to the south. ....ArkLaMiss/Mid-South/Middle Tennessee... A surface cold front will slowly but steadily sink through Arkansas with another round of convection possible this afternoon after the early morning activity out of Missouri weakens and the atmosphere has time to recover. Despite weaker dynamics overall but sufficient moisture in the column ahead of the front, some heavier rainfall rates of 2-3"/hr are possible as storms progress southeastward. May need to re-evaluate later this morning to assess atmospheric recovery/stability. Risk outline continues into Middle TN where FFG values are a bit lower but so are the probabilities of higher rainfall rates >2"/hr as well as a bit lower areal coverage. Fracasso Day 2 Valid 12Z Thu Sep 07 2023 - 12Z Fri Sep 08 2023 ....THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE NORTHEAST AND INTERIOR MID-ATLANTIC... A mid-level shortwave over Michigan early Thursday will lift into Ontario and weaken as its surfaced cold front continues eastward through the Upper Ohio Valley. Surge of moisture ahead of the front -- precipitable water values 1.50-1.75 inches (+1 to +2 sigma) -- and increased instability in afternoon heating will support scattered showers/storms over the region. 00Z HREF neighborhood probabilities show 10-30% chance of exceeding 1-hr FFG values from WV northward to VT (though at times driven by a couple wet FV3 runs), but the ingredients are there for a localized flash flood threat. FFG values are relatively lower across the Catskills/Southern Tier in NY and into NEPA, though the entire region has seen little rainfall in the past week. Nonetheless, the more complex terrain from eastern WV northeastward into PA and upstate NY into VT may be a factor in more sensitive areas should heavier rain rates develop. Maintained the Marginal Risk area with a small extension into VT which aligns close to the D2 SPC Outlook as well. Fracasso Day 3 Valid 12Z Fri Sep 08 2023 - 12Z Sat Sep 09 2023 ....THERE IS A MARGINAL RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR PORTIONS OF THE NORTHEAST/INTERIOR MID-ATLANTIC... Approaching frontal boundary toward the East Coast on Friday will likely stall near the I-81 corridor, allowing the region from the Appalachians to the coast to stay in the moist air mass on southerly flow. Initial surge of moisture into the region on D2/Thursday will move bodily into southeastern/Atlantic Canada, but residual precipitable water values over 1.50 inches (+1 to +1.5 sigma) will remain over the area. Focus for afternoon shower/storms would generally lie south of I-90 in NY through much of the Mid-Atlantic, but preferred to draw a Marginal Risk area closer to the lower FFG values over parts of upstate NY into eastern PA, which may see appreciable rain on Thursday. Model QPF was not all that high at this range but a somewhat targeted Marginal Risk outline sufficed for now. Fracasso $$ --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux * Origin: Ilink: CCO - capitolcityonline.net (454:1/105) .