• MESO: SW Heavy Rain/Flood

    From Mike Powell@454:1/105 to All on Saturday, August 19, 2023 07:33:00
    AWUS01 KWNH 191136
    FFGMPD
    AZZ000-NVZ000-CAZ000-191735-

    Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0946
    NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
    736 AM EDT Sat Aug 19 2023

    Areas affected...southern/southeastern California, southwestern
    Arizona, far southern Nevada

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

    Valid 191135Z - 191735Z

    Summary...Convection is gradually deepening across the discussion
    area this morning, and these trends should continue through at
    least 17Z. 1+ inch/hr rain rates are likely to cause flash
    flooding in a few spots.

    Discussion...Recent radar mosaic imagery depicted an uptick in
    coverage of deep convection in areas along and south of I-10 and
    east of the Peninsular Ranges this morning. The storms are in a
    weakly forced environment with ample instability and moisture
    (1000+ J/kg MLCAPE and 1.5-2 inch PW values) to support deep
    convection along with efficient rainfall processes. Additionally,
    forcing for ascent was relatively weak, with deepening convection
    tied to 1) weak upper-level speed divergence with a southerly
    60-90kt speed max noted at 300mb just west of the discussion area
    and 2) weak low-level upslope with easterly flow against the
    eastern Transverse and Peninsular Ranges. Despite fast upper
    flow, weaker low- to mid-level flow was allowing for modest storm
    motions (5-15 knots), which should eventually enable 1+ inch/hr
    rain rates to materialize as storms deepen/mature.

    Ongoing convective trends should continue through the morning as heating/instability develop northward toward southern Nevada and
    more of western Arizona. Weak low-level advection will also
    likely aid in increasing moisture into those areas as well.
    Occasional areas of 1+ inch/hr rain rates (and local amounts
    exceeding 2 inches) are likely to cause flash flooding -
    especially where that rainfall can occur across urban, low-lying,
    and/or flood-prone areas. Convective coverage should continue to
    expand both northward and eastward with time.

    Cook

    ATTN...WFO...FGZ...PSR...SGX...TWC...VEF...

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

    LAT...LON 35741491 35331367 33811289 32731282 31921307
    32181445 32091587 32571643 33391673 34441698
    35321631

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