BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  HVYRAIN: Excessive Rainfall Discussion
De:       COD Weather Processor
Data:     Sat, 30 May 2026 22:46:33 +0000
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FOUS30 KWBC 302246
QPFERD

Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
646 PM EDT Sat May 30 2026

Day 1
Valid 2241Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Sun May 31 2026

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF
MONTANA INTO WESTERN SOUTH DAKOTA...

23z Update: Based on observational trends we expanded the Slight=20
risk into portions of western SD and the Marginal risk into=20
northeast CO. Ongoing convection in these areas is showing some=20
signs of training resulting in an isolated to scattered flash flood
risk. The greater coverage of higher rainfall rates is expected=20
over western SD, and do expect to see some FFG exceedance here=20
over the next several hours as convection gradually shifts east=20
while also backbuilding into the southerly low level flow. Recent=20
HRRR runs indicate localized totals around 3" and that seems=20
plausible.

Chenard

16Z Update...

...Tennessee Valley...

Current radar and RAP mesoanalysis show a weak 925 mb circulation over
central TN that is caught between the front to the north and the low-
level WSWrly over MS/AL. The 12Z BMX sounding shows the atmosphere
remains weakly capped with a 1.9" PW, and >500 MLCAPE, RH at low
and mid levels >90%, and a warm cloud layer approaching 12,000ft
in depth. A nearby outflow boundary is also moving south into
southern TN this morning and is likely to trigger additional heavy
thunderstorms this afternoon. There is not much in the way of
vertical wind shear, so storms will be fairly short lived. But up
to 2.5"/hr rainfall rates this afternoon and evening atop soils
that remain quite saturated led to an extension of the Marginal
Risk in the Southeast as far north and west as south-central TN.

Otherwise, some minor tweaks were made to the Marginal in the
Southeast and Northern and Central Plains, as well as the Slight
Risk in MT based on latest 12Z HREF and 12Z CAMs guidance. The
threat areas and rationale provided by night shift remain in good
shape as of this update.

Mullinax

---Previous Discussion---

...Northern Rockies to the Plains...

Maintained the Slight risk across portions of Montana as a mid-
and upper-level system makes its way northward slowly today. The
system should foster locally intense rainfall rates...especially in
the eastern portion of the Slight Risk area...given moderately
steep lapse rates and some potential for enough breaks in cloud
cover. The HREF neighborhood probabilities of exceeding 1"/hr in
the 30-50% range, and 2"/hr around 10%. This results in HREF FFG
exceedance probabilities broadly over 25 percent. The RRFS shows a
similar evolution in roughly the same area but was not quite as
high with its probability of exceedance or with the probability of
1 inch per hour rainfall. Farther west;..the instability is
expected to be weaker but the greater coverage of rainfall looks
to offset the instability shortfall. As mentioned previously...the
flood risk should gradually transition from flash flood to areal
flood/river flood as you go west across the state.

A Marginal Risk area extending eastward from Montana and then
southward from the Northern Plains and Mid-Mississippi Valley was
largely left in place given the signal in the HREF for locally
heavy rainfall rates within an elongated moisture plume originating
from the Southeast US. It was done so despite convective details
remaining uncertain. The most organized convective threat may end
up over portions of NE and SD given a highly difluent flow aloft
and low level convergent flow. However, there are also signals of
organized convective clusters within the moisture axis anywhere
from Arkansas to Iowa, While convection is unlikely along this
entire axis...where it does develop rainfall rate potential will be
high enough for localized flash flooding.

...Southeast...

Latest numerical guidance continued to show locally heavy rainfall
today and tonight along and south of a boundary moving in from the
north. There was a bit of a westward expansion in the western
extent shown by the HREF and RRFS of the 1-inch per hour
probabilities and the probability of exceedance. As a result...the
Marginal Risk was expanded westward in parts of Georgia to Alabama.

Bann

Day 2
Valid 12Z Sun May 31 2026 - 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR PORTIONS OF THE SOUTHEAST...

20Z Update...

...Southeast...

A nearby frontal boundary will become the focus for yet more strong
thunderstorms over much of the Southeast on Sunday. Just south of
the front in southern SC, southern GA, and northern FL, this region
is a reservoir of >2.0" PWs that are available thanks in large part
to a southerly IVT that contains moisture originating from the
western Caribbean Sea. Area-averaged soundings suggest a
sufficiently unstable atmosphere (>1,000 K/kg MLCAPE), well
saturated 1000-500mb columns, and warm cloud layers up to 14,000ft
deep in some cases. The key in determining the full extent of the
flash flooding threat will be how much cloud debris from Saturday
and Saturday night's thunderstorm activity lingers into Sunday.
That said, weak capping inversions should allow for storms to
develop as early as late morning and soils in the area remain
rather saturated following such an active week-long stretch of
heavy rainfall. In collaboration with several Southeast WFOs, a
Slight Risk was added this cycle given the potential for scattered
instances of flash flooding.

...West Texas...

A Marginal Risk was introduced this cycle given the growing
consensus of global models and CAMs that were hinting at
thunderstorms firing over the Davis Mountains and along the
dryline. PWs surge to >1.0" in these areas as low-level SErly flow
introduces additional 850mb moisture flux into the region and a
sheared 500mb vort max approaching from northern Mexico. Sufficient
instability also appears to be present with MUCAPE up to 1,000
J/kg expected to be available. West Texas continues to have locally
sensitive soils in wake of recent rainfall as well. Given these
factors, a Marginal Risk was introduced for a localized flash
flood threat in West Texas Sunday afternoon and evening.

Mullinax

---Previous Discussion---

Any heavy to excessive rainfall should be located in or near a
plume of anomalous moisture plume that will extend from Montana
into the Southeast United State. Large scale forcing is more
subtle outside of the Northern Plains/Rockies...but there should be
some weak shortwave energy embedded within the weak flow that will
make them difficult or impossible to time. As this shortwave energy
encounters a late day atmosphere with MUCAPE values in excess of
3000 J per kg from the Plains into the Mississippi Valley and parts
of the Southeast US...storms have the potential to produce very
intense rainfall rates that approach or exceed flash flood
guidance along this entire corridor. A large and generally
unfocused Marginal Risk area still seems to handle the localized
nature of flash flood risk that should exist.

The Montana portion of the Marginal Risk has the strongest synoptic
forcing as a mid- and upper-level system gradually moves north of
the border...keeping the western part of the state in lingering
wrap-around rainfall before gradually tapering off.

Bann


Day 3
Valid 12Z Mon Jun 01 2026 - 12Z Tue Jun 02 2026

The probability of rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance is less
than 5 percent.

There remain some hints in latest 12Z guidance that the overall
risk of excessive rainfall is non-zero over the Plains from Kansas
into Colorado. Models show a low level axis of moisture and
instability moving northward on Monday afternoon but the placement
of the heaviest thunderstorm activity remains unclear. In
addition, portions of the Mid-South may also be at-risk for
Excessive Rainfall, but guidance remains murky on where storms will
initiate. Given these reasons, the Day 3 ERO remains free of
risk areas for the time being.

Bann/Mullinax


Day 1 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go=
v/qpf/94epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UzOi-uR3qnixupTFdhLgdgZWf88dCkaeV4eJuU9CQst=
4JG3TgD-Iy8uDrtDmItBxaU2pnRRGg-LUOpNw3dS4VxJpzk$=20
Day 2 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go=
v/qpf/98epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UzOi-uR3qnixupTFdhLgdgZWf88dCkaeV4eJuU9CQst=
4JG3TgD-Iy8uDrtDmItBxaU2pnRRGg-LUOpNw3dS1h5Vqdg$=20
Day 3 threat area: https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.go=
v/qpf/99epoints.txt__;!!DZ3fjg!_UzOi-uR3qnixupTFdhLgdgZWf88dCkaeV4eJuU9CQst=
4JG3TgD-Iy8uDrtDmItBxaU2pnRRGg-LUOpNw3dSWHj7k8g$=20

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