####018006742#### FXUS21 KWNC 101815 PMDTHR US Hazards Outlook NWS Climate Prediction Center College Park MD 300 PM EDT April 10 2024 SYNOPSIS: Mid-level low pressure is forecast across the north-central CONUS early in week-2, with surface low pressure tracking into east-central Canada at the outset of the period. This set-up favors a frontal boundary extending from the Southern Plains and Lower Mississippi Valley through the Great Lakes and Interior Northeast. Increased moisture flow from the Gulf of Mexico favors the highest chances for heavy precipitation more over the southern areas, but a northward entrainment of moisture is likely along the front which may bring increased chances of heavy precipitation through parts of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. On the backside of the front, elevated chances for gusty winds are forecast over a broad area including the Southwest, Great Plains, and Great Lakes. Surface high pressure is forecast to build across the Northern Rockies, which should allow winds to diminish in that region, with a tighter gradient likely further south across the central Rockies and continued potential for upslope heavy snow. HAZARDS Moderate risk of heavy precipitation across portions of the Southern Plains and Lower and Middle Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee Valleys, Thu-Sat, Apr 18-20. Slight risk of heavy precipitation across portions of the Southern Plains, Lower and Middle Mississippi, Ohio, and Tennessee Valleys, Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and the Interior Northeast, Thu-Sat, Apr 18-20. Slight risk of heavy snow across portions of the Central Rockies, Thu-Fri, Apr 18-19. Slight risk of high winds across portions of the Southwest, Central and Southern Rockies, Great Plains, Upper and Middle Mississippi Valley, and Great Lakes, Thu-Fri, Apr 18-19. Possible flooding across portions of northeastern Texas, extreme southeastern Oklahoma, and much of the Lower Mississippi Valley. DETAILED SUMMARY FOR SATURDAY APRIL 13 - WEDNESDAY APRIL 17: https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/threats/threats.php FOR THURSDAY APRIL 18 - WEDNESDAY APRIL 24: At the end of week-1 and into the outset of week-2, the 0z GEFS, ECMWF, and Canadian ensembles are in good agreement regarding surface low pressure tracking into east-central Canada. Troughing is predicted across the north-central CONUS early in week-2, with amplified ridging and above-normal 500-hPa heights forecast along the Eastern Seaboard. This favors enhanced southerly flow along a slow-moving front forecast to be set-up over the east-central CONUS, which will lead to increased chances for heavy precipitation. Thunderstorm activity is also possible for areas farther south, which could lead to enhanced precipitation totals locally. The GEFS and ECMWF Probabilistic Extremes Tools (PETs) depict at least a 20 percent chance of 3-day precipitation totals exceeding the 85th climatological percentile and 1-inch over the Southern Plains and Middle and Lower Mississippi, Ohio, and Tennessee Valleys. The uncalibrated guidance is more robust, with the 0z ECMWF depicting some areas with a 20 percent chance of 3-day precipitation exceeding 2-inches over these areas, with 24-hour totals possibly over 1-inch. Week-2 ensemble mean total precipitation exceeds 1.5 to 2 inches in the 0z GEFS, ECMWF, and Canadian, with most precipitation forecast to fall early in the period. Given these increased signals, a moderate risk of heavy precipitation is highlighted across from the Ark-La-Tex region to the Ohio-Mississippi River Confluence, Apr 18-20. The slight risk extends farther north into the Ohio Valley and Interior Northeast given the enhanced frontogenetic forcing over these areas. A possible flood risk area is designated for parts of northeastern Texas, extreme southeastern Oklahoma, and much of the Lower Mississippi Valley due to antecedent wet conditions anticipated during week-1 and forecast heavy precipitation during week-2, where there are some locations already experiencing flood conditions. Elevated wind speeds are forecast behind this frontal system across a broad region extending from the Southwest, Great Plains, Mississippi Valley, and Great Lakes, with a slight risk for high winds posted for Apr 18-19. Across the Northern Tier, the departing surface low is predicted to lead to a tight pressure gradient across the region. While a moderate risk was considered given the set-up, the magnitude of wind speeds was not overly impressive in recent deterministic GFS and ECMWF runs. As the aforementioned front moves out by the middle of week-2, there are some indications that elevated wind speeds could work their way into the Northeast and this will be reevaluated tomorrow. Surface high pressure building southward out of Canada favors decreasing wind speeds across the Northern Rockies. However, a tight pressure gradient remains forecast across the Central and Southern Rockies and Plains. This may also lead to continued chances for upslope snow across the Central Rockies, with the uncalibrated 0z ECMWF and GEFS snow water equivalent (SWE) PET continuing to support a slight risk for heavy snow over the region Apr 18-19. Additionally, the National Interagency Fire Center (NIFC) indicates the greatest potential for wildfires for day-7 across much of the Four Corners and Southern Plains, and this should persist into week-2 given the continued potential for increased wind speeds and little precipitation. A period of below-normal temperatures is possible across parts of the Great Basin, Rockies, and Northern Plains early in the period, with some sporadic areas of mixed vegetation susceptibility noted across parts of Utah and Colorado. Subfreezing temperatures are possible across these areas, but the threat of any widespread impacts is marginal, thus no related hazard is posted. By the middle of week-2, this anomalous cold may shift across parts of the eastern CONUS. However, temperatures are unlikely to reach hazards thresholds. Across Alaska, the week-2 mean pattern is predicted to be dominated by positive 500-hPa height anomalies across much of the state initially, with increasing northerly flow and troughing extending southward from the Arctic favoring increased chances for below-normal temperatures. Surface low formation is possible over the Gulf of Alaska during week-2, although this is not anticipated to support any hazards at this time. FORECASTER: Thomas Collow $$