• Heavy Rain/Flooding TX

    From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to All on Wed Jun 19 03:56:00 2024
    AWUS01 KWNH 191251
    FFGMPD
    TXZ000-191850-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0467
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    850 AM EDT Wed Jun 19 2024

    Areas affected...South-Central to Southeast TX

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

    Valid 191250Z - 191850Z

    SUMMARY...The broken outer rainbands associated with Potential
    Tropical Cyclone One will be arriving this morning across
    south-central to southeast TX. Heavy rainfall rates and eventually
    some concerns for training convection will support a gradually
    increasing threat for flash flooding.

    DISCUSSION...Potential Tropical Cyclone One remains situated down
    over the southern Gulf of Mexico early this morning, but the
    broken outer rainbands around the northwest flank of the system's
    circulation are approaching the middle and lower TX coastlines and
    will begin to move inland over the next several hours.

    Cloud top temperatures in the GOES-E IR satellite imagery have
    been tending to cool a bit overall over the last couple of hours
    with the offshore activity, and this is largely be driven by
    increasing low-level moisture flux convergence and instability
    transport focusing along inverted surface trough. MLCAPE values
    offshore over the western Gulf of Mexico are on the order of 1500
    to 2500 J/kg, and with notable low-level speed convergence and
    even frictional convergence near the coast, there will likely be
    an increased level of convection becoming concentrated very close
    to the coast and also just inland over the next several hours.

    The environment is extremely moist around the northwest quadrant
    of the system circulation, with PWs that are on the order of 2.4
    to 2.6 inches based on early-morning GPS-derived data and the
    latest CIRA-ALPW data shows highly concentrated moisture all the
    way through the top of the vertical column. The very deep warm
    cloud layer environment coupled with the instability transport and strengthening vertical ascent along the coast will support these
    bands of convection producing extremely high rainfall rates that
    should easily reach into the 2 to 3 inch/hour range, and may
    approach 4 inches/hour for some of the stronger convective cells
    by midday that will likely arrive once stronger instability begins
    to overspread the coast.

    Dry antecedent conditions will initially cut down on the flash
    flooding risk, but over time, the arrival of heavier rainfall
    rates and eventually cell-training concerns, should elevate the
    flash flood threat. As depicted by the 06Z HREF consensus,
    rainfall amounts going through early afternoon may reach 3 to 6
    inches, and this will at a minimum support an urban flash flood
    threat. Trends will be closely monitored over the next several
    hours, and additional MPDs will be issued this afternoon
    accordingly.

    Orrison

    ATTN...WFO...BRO...CRP...EWX...HGX...

    ATTN...RFC...WGRFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 29459553 28979521 28499599 27799680 26799716
    25779721 25699802 25969846 26839867 27859840
    28639783 29289677
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