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From | To | Subject | Date/Time | |||
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Mike Powell | All | Heavy Rainfall No Califor |
February 2, 2025 9:05 AM * |
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AWUS01 KWNH 020701 FFGMPD NVZ000-CAZ000-021900- Mesoscale Precipitation Discussion 0012 NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 200 AM EST Sun Feb 02 2025 Areas affected...Northern California Concerning...Heavy rainfall Valid 020700Z - 021900Z SUMMARY...An atmospheric river aimed at northern California will continue to produce heavy rain with rates between 1/4 and 3/4 inches per hour possible. DISCUSSION...An atmospheric river aimed at northern California will continue to advect tropical moisture from near Hawaii northeastward into the state today. The moisture has a tropical connection due to an expansive area of high pressure located off southern California joining forces with a cold core low off Vancouver Island to squeeze the moisture into a relatively narrow corridor (atmospheric river). PWATs between 1 and 1.25 inches are associated with the moisture plume. This is 4 sigma above the climatological normal as well as within the 90th to 95th percentile compared to a 30-year average of PWATs for the area. IVT values from CW3E GFS and EC guidance are around 800 kg/ms. Over the past 24 hours, Anywhere from 1 to 4 inches of rain have fallen across northern California, with the highest values in the Sierras around and west of the Lake Tahoe region. NASA Sport soil moisture imagery shows much of the surface soil layer has saturated significantly compared to 24 hours ago, so most of the rain that falls from here should convert to runoff. Radar imagery shows a plume of rainfall occurring over much of far northern California with rates generally between 1/10 and 1/4 inch per hour ongoing. These rates are confirmed by the numerous weather stations set up across northern California. A stationary front draped over northern California (not shown) delineates the remarkable surface convergence occurring within this atmospheric river, with winds off the coast of Crescent City 20 kts out of the north, and winds both off the coast of Mendocino as well as up the northern Sacramento Valley are 20 kts out of the south. This remarkable convergence is adding to the overall lift within the atmosphere along the front, with almost all of the rain occurring north of the front. As a potent upper level shortwave approaches the coast over the next 12 hours, HiRes models are in good agreement as to a slight increase in rainfall rates in far northern California over the next 4 hours or so, followed by a gradual southward drift of the rainfall plume towards Point Arena and the northern Sacramento Valley. Rainfall rates may locally increase to as high as 3/4 inches per hour. Along the coast, rates should diminish through the predawn hours, with the rainfall tapering from north to south through the morning. Expect 3-6 inches of rain for much of the northern Sierras through 19Z, 2-4 inches of rain for the northern Coastal Ranges, and lesser amounts within the Sacramento Valley along the I-5 corridor and to the immediate lee (east) of the coastal ranges. Mudslides and rock slides are possible in the foothills and mountains below 6,500 feet where the precipitation remains all rain. Localized flooding is possible in the areas where the heaviest rain occurs over flood-sensitive and low-lying areas. Wegman ATTN...WFO...EKA...MFR...MTR...REV...STO... ATTN...RFC...CNRFC...NWC... LAT...LON 41902181 41862023 41252007 39932011 39391980 38501957 38312007 38352115 39352158 40282212 40012270 39472270 38732243 38352235 38622251 38122328 38932398 39432394 40012417 40472452 40982421 41562316 $$ --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (618:250/1) |
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