• Heavy Rain/Flooding UT/AZ

    From Mike Powell@618:250/1 to All on Thursday, August 22, 2024 08:39:00
    AWUS01 KWNH 221322
    FFGMPD
    AZZ000-UTZ000-221920-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0919
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    921 AM EDT Thu Aug 22 2024

    Areas affected...southern UT...northern AZ

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

    Valid 221320Z - 221920Z

    Summary...Localized short-term totals in excess of 2" are likely
    to lead to isolated to widely scattered instances of flash
    flooding. An instance or two of flash flooding may be significant,
    with particular concern for slot canyons, normally dry washes, and
    other sensitive low-lying areas).

    Discussion...The Southwestern U.S. remains wedged between an upper
    low/trough to the northwest (off the Northwest U.S. coast) and a
    upper high/ridge to the southeast (over TX), enhancing the
    seasonal monsoonal pattern with moisture streaming northward in
    the lower to mid levels (925-700 mb). Widely scattered convection
    is evident via GOES and MRMS imagery over portions of southern UT
    and northern AZ at this early morning hour, unusual for even this
    more rainy time of year. The mesoscale environment is
    characterized by pockets of 500-1000 J/kg of SB CAPE, a broad
    plume of precipitable water values ranging from 0.9 to 1.3 inches
    (between the 90th percentile and max moving average, per VEF and
    FGZ sounding climatology), and effective bulk shear of 20-30 kts.
    This parameter space should continue to support at least isolated
    convection through midday, despite somewhat limited CAPE and
    unfavorable diurnal timing, particularly because convection is
    already ongoing and shear is anomalously high (near the 90th
    percentile, owing to the unseasonable strength of the Northwest
    U.S. trough).

    While hi-res CAMs notoriously struggle with monsoonal convection,
    there is some HREF signal (from the 06z run) to support a flash
    flood risk in the near term. While the HRRR is consistently one of
    the weakest members of the ensemble, there is still a 10-20%
    chance for localized 2" exceedance, per 40-km neighborhood method
    via the 06z HREF. These values are quite significant across this
    hydrologically sensitive portion of the country, corresponding to
    20-30% chances of exceeding the 10-year average recurrence
    interval (ARI), and even a 10% chance of exeecind the 100-year ARI
    (maximized over portions of southwestern UT, where much of the
    rainfall so far this morning has already occured). Given this
    favorable enviornment and the local sensitivity, isolated to
    scattered instances of flash flooding are likely (and may be
    locally significant, particularly in the vicinity of slot canyons,
    normally dry washes, and other sensitive low-lying areas).

    Churchill

    ATTN...WFO...FGZ...GJT...SLC...VEF...

    ATTN...RFC...CBRFC...NWC...

    LAT...LON 38531152 37410974 35441022 34611246 35131352
    35791393 37291388 38061317
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