• Heavy Rain/Flooding South

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu May 23 07:56:00 2024
    AWUS01 KWNH 230901
    FFGMPD
    LAZ000-ARZ000-TXZ000-OKZ000-231500-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0306
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    500 AM EDT Thu May 23 2024

    Areas affected...southeast OK into the Ark-La-Tex

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

    Valid 230900Z - 231500Z

    Summary...A compact MCS will produce heavy rainfall across
    recently soaked portions of southeast OK into the Ark-La-Tex,
    possibly resulting in isolated to scattered instances of flash
    flooding.

    Discussion...A cluster of thunderstorms that formed overnight in
    southern OK has gradually organized into a compact MCS over the
    past several hours, largely being missed by the recent 00z HREF
    suite. While hi-res CAMs entirely failed to initiate convection in
    a timely matter in this region, the mesoscale environment does
    appear favorable for continued MCS maintenance and growth into the
    early morning hours (which the 06z and 07z HRRR did finally pick
    up on after a run or two of the model that failed to properly
    assimilate the WSR-88d data). Looking downstream into the
    Ark-La-Tex region, SPC mesoscale analysis indicates PWATs of
    1.5-1.8 inches (above the 90th percentile, per SHV sounding
    climatology), ML CAPE of 1000-1500 J/kg, and effective bulk shear
    of 40-50 kts. Additionally, the storms appear positioned near a quasi-stationary surface front with a diurnally strengthening
    20-30 kt LLJ bringing ample low-level moisture transport. These
    meteorological factors and parameter space suggest high
    favorability for maintaining an MCS into the early morning hours
    (as indicated by an MCS maintenance parameter of 90-100).

    While the hi-res CAMs are not particularly useful in this case,
    the latest HRRR runs do provide a decent depiction of what is
    expected (though perhaps still a bit underdone in the overall
    coverage and intensity of heavy rainfall compared to observational
    trends). The expectation is for storms to become increasingly
    organized and cold pool dominate, which would favor a more
    southerly component to storm motion (following the upwind
    propagation vector towards the southeast, rather than the mostly
    easterly dominate motion thus far). Concerns for localized flash
    flooding are highest along the southern flank of the developing
    MCS, where 1-3"/hr rainfall rates may have their greatest
    residence time, resulting in localized totals of 2-4". Given that
    the bulk of the region has seen at least moderate to heavy
    rainfall over the past 6-12 hours (with localized totals of 2-4"
    from the prior storms as well), isolated to scattered instances of
    flash flooding are possible (with 3-hr FFGs still generally
    ranging from 2-4"). Should the MCS make it all the way into
    northwest LA (and particularly into the Shreveport metro area)
    where FFGs are generally 2.5" or less, flash flooding may be
    locally significant.

    Churchill

    ATTN...WFO...FWD...LZK...OUN...SHV...TSA...

    ATTN...RFC...ABRFC...LMRFC...WGRFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 35489564 35269400 34039241 32749265 32479418
    33189612 33789729 34509652 35169627

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