108  
FXUS02 KWBC 250657  
PMDEPD  
 
EXTENDED FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NWS WEATHER PREDICTION CENTER COLLEGE PARK MD  
257 AM EDT THU APR 25 2024  
 
VALID 12Z SUN APR 28 2024 - 12Z THU MAY 02 2024  
 
***SEVERE THUNDERSTORMS AND HEAVY RAIN EXPECTED FOR THE PLAINS AND  
MIDWEST SUNDAY INTO MONDAY***  
 
   
..GENERAL OVERVIEW
 
 
AN AMPLIFIED UPPER LEVEL FLOW PATTERN IS FORECAST TO BE IN PLACE  
ACROSS THE CONTINENTAL U.S. THIS WEEKEND, WITH A BUILDING RIDGE  
ACROSS THE EAST AND A TROUGH ACROSS THE ROCKIES. A STRONG  
SHORTWAVE EJECTING ACROSS THE CENTRAL PLAINS WILL SPUR SURFACE  
CYCLOGENESIS AND MULTIPLE ROUNDS OF HEAVY RAIN AND STRONG/SEVERE  
THUNDERSTORMS, MAINLY FROM CENTRAL TEXAS TO IOWA/MISSOURI. VERY  
WARM CONDITIONS FOR THIS TIME OF YEAR ARE EXPECTED FOR THE EASTERN  
HALF OF THE U.S. GOING INTO THE BEGINNING OF NEXT WEEK, AND COLDER  
TEMPERATURES OUT WEST WILL SUPPORT SOME LINGERING SNOW FOR THE  
HIGHER TERRAIN OF THE COLORADO ROCKIES. A SECOND TROUGH IS THEN  
LIKELY TO DEVELOP ALONG THE WEST COAST BY THE MIDDLE TO END OF THE  
NEXT WEEK WITH THE RIDGE AXIS BUILDING ACROSS THE PLAINS.  
 
   
..GUIDANCE/PREDICTABILITY ASSESSMENT
 
 
THE 00Z MODEL GUIDANCE SUITE FEATURES GOOD OVERALL AGREEMENT ACROSS  
THE U.S. ON SUNDAY WITH SIMILAR TIMING ON THE MAIN SHORTWAVE ACROSS  
THE CENTRAL HIGH PLAINS, SO A MULTI-DETERMINISTIC MODEL BLEND  
WORKS WELL AS A STARTING POINT IN THE FORECAST PROCESS. GREATER  
DIFFERENCES ARE APPARENT ACROSS THE NORTHERN ROCKIES AND DAKOTAS BY  
TUESDAY, WITH THE 00Z ECMWF TRENDING STRONGER WITH AN UPPER LOW  
TRACKING NEAR THE CANADIAN BORDER. BY WEDNESDAY, THE 00Z ECMWF  
BECOMES MORE OUT OF LINE WITH THE CONSENSUS AND THE MACHINE  
LEARNING MODELS WITH THE UPPER LOW/TROUGH NEAR THE PACIFIC  
NORTHWEST, SO THE GFS AND GEFS MEAN SERVE AS A BETTER DEPICTION  
HERE. THERE IS ALSO DISAGREEMENT ON THE TIMING OF A TROUGH AND COLD  
FRONT ACROSS THE GREAT LAKES AND NORTHEAST BY THE END OF THE  
FORECAST PERIOD THURSDAY, WITH THE CMC/GFS FASTER AND THE ECMWF  
SLOWER. THE USE OF THE ENSEMBLE MEANS ACCOUNTED FOR ABOUT HALF OF  
THE FORECAST BLEND BY NEXT THURSDAY. THE QPF FORECAST STARTED  
WITH ABOUT 50% NBM AND 1/6 EACH OF THE GFS/ECMWF/CMC THROUGH  
MONDAY, AND THEN TRENDING TO ABOUT 2/3 NBM AND REMOVING THE CMC  
FOR TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY.  
 
   
..WEATHER/HAZARDS HIGHLIGHTS
 
 
 
THE OVERALL SYNOPTIC ENVIRONMENT WILL BE QUITE CONDUCIVE FOR  
MULTIPLE EPISODES OF EXCESSIVE RAINFALL ACROSS PORTIONS OF THE  
CENTRAL AND LOWER MISSISSIPPI RIVER VALLEY. THERE WILL LIKELY BE  
MULTIPLE MESOSCALE CONVECTIVE SYSTEMS THAT DEVELOP FROM THE  
ARKLATEX REGION TO MISSOURI, AND THERE IS A GOOD CHANCE OF  
TRAINING CONVECTION GIVEN THE SLOW OVERALL PROGRESSION OF THE  
FRONTAL BOUNDARY AND PARALLEL FLOW TO THE TRAILING FRONTAL  
BOUNDARY. FOR THE DAY 4 PERIOD SUNDAY, THE EXISTING SLIGHT RISK  
AREA FROM THE PREVIOUS DAY 5 WILL BE EXPANDED TO INCLUDE MORE OF  
EASTERN TEXAS WHERE THE QPF SIGNAL IN THE GFS/ECMWF HAS INCREASED.  
THERE IS NOW A MULTI- MODEL SIGNAL FOR SOME 3-5 INCH TOTALS WHERE  
STORMS TRAIN OVER THE SAME AREAS, WITH LOCALLY HIGHER TOTALS  
POSSIBLE. THERE IS STILL A GOOD CHANCE FOR A FUTURE UPGRADE TO  
MODERATE RISK FOR PORTIONS OF THIS REGION IF THESE MODEL TRENDS  
CONTINUE. THE WPC FORECAST FOR QPF REMAINS ON THE LOWER END OF THE  
GUIDANCE SPECTRUM GIVEN THE INFLUENCE FROM THE NBM. A SLIGHT RISK  
AREA IS ALSO PLANNED ON DAY 5 CENTERED OVER NORTHERN LOUISIANA AND  
INTO PORTIONS OF ADJACENT STATES, GENERALLY SOUTHEAST OF THE DAY 4  
OUTLOOK AREA. THE CONVERGENCE BOUNDARY IS LIKELY TO LINGER ACROSS  
THE REGION ON MONDAY AND FIRE NEW ROUNDS OF CONVECTION, FOLLOWED BY  
AN ABATEMENT IN THE COVERAGE AND INTENSITY OF THE CONVECTION GOING  
IN TUESDAY OVER THIS REGION.  
 
ELSEWHERE ACROSS THE U.S., WIDESPREAD MODERATE TO LOCALLY HEAVY  
RAIN IS EXPECTED FROM MINNESOTA TO NORTHERN MICHIGAN ON SUNDAY AS  
THE SURFACE LOW LIFTS NORTHEASTWARD, AND A MARGINAL RISK AREA IS  
PLANNED TO ACCOUNT FOR THAT ON THE DAY 4 OUTLOOK. COLDER  
TEMPERATURES MOVING IN ACROSS THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST AND THE  
ROCKIES BEHIND THIS STORM SYSTEM WILL LIKELY RESULT IN CONTINUING  
SNOW SHOWERS FOR THE HIGHER MOUNTAIN RANGES OF WYOMING AND  
COLORADO, ALTHOUGH BECOMING LIGHTER. RAIN AND MOUNTAIN SNOW IS ALSO  
LIKELY TO MAKE A RETURN TO THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST FOR THE BEGINNING  
TO MIDDLE OF NEXT WEEK AS THE NEXT SHORTWAVE TROUGH ARRIVES. BY  
WEDNESDAY, SHOWERS AND STORMS COULD ONCE AGAIN INCREASE IN COVERAGE  
FROM TEXAS TO THE CENTRAL PLAINS.  
 
TEMPERATURES WILL ALSO BE MAKING WEATHER HEADLINES AS A MAJOR  
WARM-UP IS EXPECTED FOR A WIDE EXPANSE OF THE COUNTRY EAST OF THE  
ROCKIES. HIGHS ARE EXPECTED TO RISE WELL INTO THE 80S FROM THE  
CENTRAL/SOUTHERN PLAINS TO THE OHIO VALLEY AND THEN REACHING THE  
EAST COAST BY MONDAY, PERHAPS REACHING 90 DEGREES IN SOME CASES.  
THESE READINGS ARE ON THE ORDER OF 10-20 DEGREES ABOVE NORMAL FOR  
LATE APRIL, AND THERE MAY BE SOME DAILY RECORD HIGHS SET. OVERNIGHT  
LOWS WILL ALSO BE SUMMER-LIKE WITH LOWS ONLY FALLING INTO THE 60S  
FOR MANY OF THESE SAME AREAS. A MODEST COOL-DOWN IS LIKELY BY MID-  
WEEK FROM THE GREAT LAKE TO THE OHIO VALLEY AND NORTHEAST, AND  
STILL REMAINING WARM AND HUMID ACROSS THE SOUTH-CENTRAL U.S. TO THE  
CAROLINAS. THE OPPOSITE HOLDS TRUE FOR THE INTERMOUNTAIN WEST ON  
SUNDAY WITH READINGS 5-15 DEGREES BELOW AVERAGE, BEFORE THINGS  
MODERATE GOING INTO EARLY NEXT WEEK.  
 
HAMRICK  
 
ADDITIONAL 3-7 DAY HAZARD INFORMATION CAN BE FOUND ON THE WPC  
MEDIUM RANGE HAZARDS OUTLOOK CHART AT:  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/THREATS/THREATS.PHP  
 
WPC MEDIUM RANGE 500MB HEIGHTS, SURFACE SYSTEMS, WEATHER GRIDS,  
QUANTITATIVE PRECIPITATION FORECAST (QPF), EXCESSIVE RAINFALL  
OUTLOOK (ERO), WINTER WEATHER OUTLOOK (WWO) PROBABILITIES, HEAT  
INDICES, AND KEY MESSAGES CAN BE ACCESSED FROM:  
 
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/MEDR/5DAYFCST500_WBG.GIF  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/MEDR/5DAYFCST_WBG_CONUS.GIF  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/5KM_GRIDS/5KM_GRIDSBODY.HTML  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/QPF/DAY4-7.SHTML  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/#PAGE=ERO  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/WWD/PWPF_D47/PWPF_MEDR.PHP?DAY=4  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/HEAT_INDEX.SHTML  
HTTPS://WWW.WPC.NCEP.NOAA.GOV/#PAGE=OVW  
 

 
 
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