• Heavy Rain/Flood KSMOILIN

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thu Jul 4 08:13:00 2024
    AWUS01 KWNH 040920
    FFGMPD
    KYZ000-INZ000-ILZ000-MOZ000-KSZ000-041518-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0553
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    519 AM EDT Thu Jul 04 2024

    Areas affected...Far Eastern KS...Central and Eastern
    MO...South-Central IL...Southwest IN

    Concerning...Heavy rainfall...Flash flooding likely

    Valid 040918Z - 041518Z

    SUMMARY...Showers and thunderstorms with very heavy rainfall rates
    will continue to spread off to the east this morning. Substantial
    cell-training is expected to occur and additional flash flooding
    is likely across central and eastern MO, with the threat also
    spreading east across south-central IL. Locally severe urban flash
    flooding is a strong possibility along a corridor extending from
    Kansas City east through Columbia and down to St. Louis.

    DISCUSSION...A significant band of training convection has been
    aligning itself in a west to east fashion across areas of far
    eastern KS and extending east across central and eastern MO.
    Multiple major metropolitan areas are under a threat for severe
    urban flash flooding as a result, including Kansas City, Columbia
    and St. Louis.

    The convection continues to organize and focus in response to an
    approaching shortwave trough crossing the central Plains with
    strong warm air advection out ahead of it. A southwest low-level
    jet on the order of 30 to 40+ kts continues to nose up across
    southwest to central MO and is focusing a corridor of robust
    moisture convergence and elevated instability transport. Much of
    the convection is embedded within an axis of MUCAPE values that
    are on the order of 1000 to 2000 J/kg.

    Going through the morning hours, the ongoing west to east band of
    training convection should continue to propagate off to the east
    and will be impacting more areas of especially eastern MO from
    Columbia down through St. Louis, and also increasingly into areas
    of south-central IL as the stronger axis of warm air advection and
    forcing shifts off to the east across these areas. Eventually
    areas of southwest IN may also get into some of this activity.

    The rainfall rates should continue to be quite high, and capable
    of reaching 2 to 3 inches/hour with the stronger storms given the
    persistence of the low-level jet, high PW environment and degree
    of instability that is in place.

    Overall, the HRRR guidance looks notably underdone with its QPF
    based on the latest radar and satellite trends, with the 00Z/06Z
    HREF consensus appearing more realistic. Additional rainfall
    totals going through mid-morning may locally reach 4 to 6 inches,
    and with already sensitive conditions with moist soils and
    elevated streamflows, flash flooding is highly likely over the
    next several hours. As mentioned, there will be a threat for
    severe urban flash flooding from Kansas City east through Columbia
    and down into the St. Louis metropolitan area.

    Orrison

    ATTN...WFO...EAX...ILX...IND...LMK...LSX...PAH...SGF...

    ATTN...RFC...LMRFC...MBRFC...NCRFC...OHRFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 39789352 39739052 39508860 39128725 38408653
    37808705 37698974 38089370 38639492 39359487

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