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Day 2 Outlook >
 
WPC Day 1 Excessive Rainfall Outlook
Risk of 1 to 6 hour rainfall exceeding flash flood guidance at a point
 
Updated: 1545 UTC Mon Nov 24, 2025
Valid: 16 UTC Nov 24, 2025 - 12 UTC Nov 25, 2025
 
Day 1 Excessive Rainfall Forecast
 
Forecast Discussion
Excessive Rainfall Discussion
NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD
1040 AM EST Mon Nov 24 2025
Day 1
Valid 16Z Mon Nov 24 2025 - 12Z Tue Nov 25 2025

...THERE IS A SLIGHT RISK FOR EXCESSIVE RAINFALL FOR MUCH OF
NORTHEAST TEXAS, CENTRAL AND SOUTHERN ARKANSAS AND INTO ADJACENT
PORTIONS OF SOUTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA, NORTHERN LOUISIANA, AND
NORTHWEST MISSISSIPPI...

...16Z Outlook Update...

The overall forecast philosophy remains on track for this update.
Areas of showers and thunderstorms are expected to redevelop from
southwest to northeast within an 850mb low-level jet axis extending
from near Austin, TX through the ArkLaTex. Some of the convection
will interact with left over low-level boundaries from this
morning's convection, further enhancing rainfall potential and
resulting in localized 2-4 inch daily totals. The greatest risk of
these enhanced rainfall totals will focus around northeast Texas
into northwest Louisiana and vicinity.

The overall convective scenario should translate eastward toward
the Lower Mississippi Valley through the overnight hours and become
increasingly displaced from surface-based buoyancy focused across
southeast Texas/southwest Louisiana. Flash flooding should remain
possible, but gradually decrease in coverage with eastward extent.

Risk areas across Oklahoma, northern/central Arkansas, and parts of
west-central Texas were trimmed as ongoing convective trends
suggest that any remaining flash flood threat has lessened for the
remainder of the forecast period.

Cook

...Previous Discussion...

A SW-NE axis of thunderstorms setup overnight allowing training
over central Texas. Storms are expected to linger over parts of
central Texas at the start of the D1 period while ramping up over
northeast Texas and adjacent areas as the upper trough/low
advances eastward. Localized accumulations of around 3-4" being
near or just above FFGs across northern portions of the Slight and
at or below FFGs across southern portions of the Slight. Guidance
continues to suggest the highest totals will focus near the
Arkansas and Louisiana border and over northeast Texas. A broad
Marginal Risk spans from central Texas to western portions of
Tennessee and northwest Alabama.

Campbell


Day 1 threat area: www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/qpf/94epoints.txt
 

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