• Flood Potential SD/MN/IA

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Wed Jun 25 08:17:00 2025
    AWUS01 KWNH 251133
    FFGMPD
    WIZ000-MNZ000-IAZ000-SDZ000-NDZ000-251700-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0512
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    732 AM EDT Wed Jun 25 2025

    Areas affected...eastern South Dakota, southern Minnesota, far
    northern Iowa

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

    Valid 251132Z - 251700Z

    Summary...Showers and thunderstorms will steadily increase in
    coverage through the morning, focusing along an elevated boundary.
    Rainfall rates within the stronger convection will exceed 1"/hr,
    which through training could produce locally more than 3" of rain
    and instances of flash flooding.

    Discussion...The GOES-E IR imagery this morning shows an expansive
    area of cold clouds with continued cooling tops stretched from
    western SD through MN and IA. These cooling tops are associated
    with expanding showers and thunderstorms developing within
    pronounced ascent in the RRQ of a strengthening upper jet streak
    centered over Ontario, aided by both a shortwave lifting across SD
    and potent isentropic lift as the 850mb LLJ of 20-25 kts lifts
    northward over a surface warm front. Thermodynamics across the
    region are favorable for heavy rain as reflected by SPC RAP
    analyzed PWs of 1.5 to 1.8 inches, above the 90th percentile for
    the date, and MUCAPE around 1000 J/kg. This is supporting
    widespread rainfall rates of 0.5-1"/hr from regional radars, with
    expanding heavy rainfall occurring primarily along the nose of the
    LLJ/elevated 850mb boundary.

    During the next several hours, a wave of low pressure developing
    along the warm front across SD will help pinch the flow
    downstream, helping to accelerate the LLJ to offset the typical
    diurnal weakening of this feature. At the same time, the flow may
    back more prominently to the SE, helping to funnel even more
    intense thermodynamics into MN/SD (PWs over 2" coincident with
    1000 J/kg MUCAPE). The high-res CAMs indicate that convection may
    focus in two swaths - along the warm front itself - and then more
    impressively aligned to the elevated front where moisture
    confluence will be most intense and the enhanced ascent downstream
    of the shortwave will focus. Across this area, Corfidi vectors
    become aligned to the elevated front and sharply right of the mean
    0-6km winds, suggesting an enhanced training threat. With rainfall
    rates progged by the HREF and REFS to exceed 1"/hr (40-60%
    chance), this training will result in an axis of rainfall of 2-3"
    with locally higher amounts exceeding 4" as reflected by 6-hr
    HREF/REFS probabilities and PMM.

    Recent rainfall has been highly variable across this region as
    shown by NASA Sport 0-40cm soil moisture that is only above normal
    in some places, leading to FFG generally 1.5 to 3 inches in 3
    hours. HREF exceedance probabilities are 20-30% for these
    thresholds, indicating the increased risk for flash flood
    instances this morning anywhere in the region. However, the
    greatest risk will likely be in an east-west axis along the
    elevated front from far northeast SD through eastern MN.

    Weiss

    ATTN...WFO...ABR...DLH...DMX...FGF...FSD...MPX...

    ATTN...RFC...KRF...MSR...NWC...

    LAT...LON 46129639 46039406 45659283 44799290 43829334
    43239408 42929503 42859656 43199746 43589811
    44289898 44799938 45449921 45919813

    $$
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