Extended Forecast Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
300 PM EDT Sun May 29 2022
Valid 12Z Wed Jun 01 2022 - 12Z Sun Jun 05 2022
...Multiple rounds of heavy rainfall/convection forecast to focus
across the south-central Plains near a front late
Tuesday-Thursday...
...Late week heavy rain threat increasing over southern Florida
ahead of a tropical system...
...Overview...
A cold front extending from a deep upper low over south-central
Canada is forecast to become nearly stationary across the
south-central Plains where multiple rounds of convection with
heavy rainfall are forecast to impact the area from late Tuesday
to Thursday. Additional rounds of convection/heavy rain are
possible over the central Plains by the weekend. The front could
trigger areas of heavy rain over interior New England and the
Mid-Atlantic Wednesday and Thursday. Meanwhile, tropical moisture
can be expected to increase across southern Florida through the
medium-range period as a subtropical jet is forecast to interact
with moisture coming up from tropical cyclone Agatha currently
located in the eastern Pacific. Elsewhere, upper-level ridging is
forecast to build across the interior West while an East Pacific
upper low produces troughing and unsettled weather into the
Northwest.
...Model Guidance Evaluation/Preferences...
Model guidance this morning are in reasonably good agreement with
one another regarding the synoptic evolution across the U.S.
through the medium-range period. The 00Z ECMWF was notably slower
than the rest of the guidance regarding the southward progression
of the cold front moving through the central Plains on Wednesday
into Thursday, resulting in the associated heavy rainfall axis
being noticeably farther to the north. On the other hand, the 00Z
EC mean was farther south with the frontal placement. Thus the
slow ECMWF solution is not preferred. Across the Northeast,
models continue to trend toward a flatter flow regime as a frontal
wave forms just off the northern Mid-Atlantic coast and moves out
to sea. Along the West Coast, models are in good agreement with
the timing of the arrival of the next round of moisture late this
week. The EC solutions favor a reinforcing surge of moisture into
northern California and northward during the weekend, a scenario
not as prominently indicated in the GFS, GEFS, as well as the CMC
solutions. By next weekend, ensemble means are in general
agreement for a warm front to lift northward into the central
Plains as cooler air edges southward into the northern Plains.
Farther south, models are more consistent with bringing tropical
moisture northeastward into southern Florida from the eastern
Pacific late week into the weekend with the approach of a tropical
system.
...Sensible Weather/Threat Highlights...
A surface low well into central Canada by Wednesday will send its
trailing cold front across the Great Lakes and Ohio Valley
Wednesday and the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic Thursday-Friday. Rain
and thunderstorms can be expected along this front, after some
initial showers in parts of the Northeast Wednesday near a
backdoor front. However, the back end of the main front is
forecast to move more slowly through central and southern parts of
the Plains and Mississippi Valley, and will provide a focus for
rain and thunderstorms for multiple days around Tuesday-Thursday.
Flash flooding is possible especially where storms repeat over the
same area, which at this point appears most likely to occur around
Kansas, Oklahoma, and possibly Missouri. Uncertainty remains with
the axis of the convection each day/night, but a Slight Risk of
excessive rainfall in WPC's experimental day 4 outlook seemed
warranted given moisture and instability will be abundant along
with a focus for lift with the front in place, and considering
antecedent conditions could be quite wet with Tuesday's rain.
There is increasing forecast agreement for tropical cyclone Agatha
over the eastern Pacific to turn northeastward and move across
Mexico over the next few days. Scattered showers and thunderstorms
are expected to become more frequent and widespread across
southern Florida later next week although the specifics are not
clear at this time. Factors that influence the timing and amounts
of rainfall will include (a) the interaction of a subtropical jet
with tropical moisture coming from Agatha, and the cyclone's
subsequent track and intensity after crossing Central America, (b)
the proximity of an upper low forecast to gradually gain tropical
characteristics near and northeast of the Bahamas midweek, and (c)
possible interaction with a tropical wave moving into the western
Caribbean Sea.
Additionally, rain chances are expected to increase in the
Northwest during the latter half of the week given the trough axis
near the West Coast and a couple of frontal systems. The Southwest
should remain dry and hot though. Rounds of rain are possible in
the central U.S. next weekend, but with considerable uncertainty
in the details at this point.
Upper ridging ahead of the central U.S./Canada trough/low will
promote above average temperatures by 10-20F over the Midwest/Ohio
Valley and parts of the Northeast/Mid-Atlantic Wednesday, with the
exception of parts of New England due to the backdoor front.
Meanwhile upper troughing will bring continued cool temperatures
across the Rockies and central High Plains through midweek with
highs forecast to be 10-20F or below normal. The flattening
pattern aloft will push the cold front eastward, leading to a
moderating trend for below normal temperatures over the central
U.S., with mostly single-digit negative anomalies by
Thursday-Friday, though around 10F below normal in rain-cooled
Kansas and Oklahoma. The East should see shrinking coverage of
warm temperatures on Thursday and especially Friday into the
weekend. The West Coast and into the Great Basin can expect warmer
than normal temperatures by around 5-15F Wednesday and beyond,
followed by a modest cooling trend on Friday-Sunday along the
immediate West Coast with the arrival of a Pacific front.
Kong/Tate
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, experimental excessive rainfall
outlook, winter weather outlook probabilities and heat indices are
at:
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