Quantitative Precipitation Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 259 AM EDT Mon Jun 04 2018 Prelim Day 1 QPF Discussion Valid Jun 04/1200 UTC thru Jun 05/1200 UTC Reference AWIPS Graphics under...Precip Accum - 24hr ...Northeast... The elongated, negatively tilted trough nudging into southern Ontario and the eastern Great Lakes early this morning will become reinforced by an upper jet streak/additional shortwave energy entering the trough's base. The result will be a transformation toward a more positively tilted longwave trough as the low deepens through the mid-upper levels over southern Ontario-Quebec later Mon-Mon night. Favorable exit region forcing east of the trough (upper level divergence and strengthening lower tropospheric s-se flow and positive moisture/theta-e transport) will favor additional mod-heavy rainfall along the New England coast, along the apex of 1.5"+ PWs ahead of the surface occluded front. The consensus of the 00Z guidance depicted a a decided eastward shift in the heaviest rainfall during the day 1 period (12Z Mon-12Z Tue), i.e. mainly offshore Downeast ME while clipping eastern MA/Cape Cod. While relatively efficient considering the deep subtropical moisture plume (relatively high wet bulb zero levels and 500-300 mb layer PW values near 0.25"), the absence of even elevated instability will be a significant limitation to the short term rainfall rates with respect to the excessive rainfall/flash flood threat given the current FFG values. ...Southern Plains... Southwesterly flow ahead of shortwave trough moving into the Four Corners region continues to moisten the mid levels across New Mexico and southern Colorado as southeasterly winds behind a cold front that has settled southwest into West Texas begin channel low level moisture into the region. This will continue to support developing storms across the mountains before spreading east into the High Plains this afternoon and evening. With PW anomalies increasing to 2-3 standard deviations above normal, there remains a good model signal for locally heavy accumulations this afternoon and evening from the southern Colorado and New Mexico ranges southeastward into the adjacent High Plains of eastern New Mexico and West Texas. Forecast confidence diminishes overnight as the hi-res models show significant spread with respect to how quickly convection diminishes as it moves further east into central Texas. While the NAM CONEST shows widespread moderate to locally heavy amounts spreading east into central Texas, the HWR-NMMB shows convection diminishing much sooner with only scattered light amounts. WPC QPF reflects a compromise similar to the HREF Mean, maintaining at least some light to moderate amounts along an axis of deeper moisture and greater instability across central Texas. As the aforementioned shortwave continues to move east, models continue to differ late in the period with possible convective redevelopment across central into southeast Texas, with the NAM CONEST this time being the much drier solution. With limited confidence, continued to follow the HREF Mean through the end of the period. Hurley