Setting the Scene
In the early hours of Thursday, a warm plume of exceptional moisture wraps into an area of low pressure developing over NW France. Having once looked to arrive late Wednesday, the approach has since been slowed down, but this has only served to raise the potential precipitation amounts further from what were already concerning amounts.
Following this initial event, any breaking up of the cloud over England and Wales during Thursday daytime has the potential to produce a sharp rise in temperatures followed by some slow moving home-grown thunderstorms. Most models are not that keen on this idea, but those that run with it produce very high totals but very localised in nature.
Then, going through Thursday night and well into Friday, we see another surge of moisture from the S or SE which may be accompanied by some severe storms across the far S and/or SE. Confidence in this is currently low so stay tuned for updates.
That surge of moisture then interacts with an occluding frontal boundary across western parts of the UK, greatly invigorating it, with the resulting very active frontal rain - probably thundery - tracking fairly slowly east, hitting a swathe of the UK with some more exceptional rain totals. The exact location won't become clear until late Thursday I imagine.
What follows is an early assessment of the potential magnitude of these weather events based on a combination of high resolution model outputs.
Early Thursday:
Elevated storms are likely to develop in that tongue of very moist air and head inland across S. England (western 2/3 most likely) by dawn Thursday, bringing frequent lightning and some torrential rain in places - but generally weakening as they head north.
Models vary greatly on the intensity of the rainfall, with the lower end bringing some 20 mm or so by the time the storms clear, but the upper end dropping as much as 80mm in the space of 9 hours... Euro4 being one of those models (http://expert-images.weatheronline.co.uk/daten/proficharts/en/euro4/2015/08/11/basis12/ukuk/rsum/15081312_1112.gif)
Measures of storm rotation (helicity) suggest that these storms have the potential to organise rapidly, resulting in some wild conditions for some parts of the region while others escape with a (or some) fairly typical summer downpour(s).
Worth noting that the likes of WRF-NMM and GFS have more of a banded structure to the convection - like an organised line advancing north - which avoids a chaining of storms S-N, so reducing the highest totals (they're the ones with near 20 mm or so). Past experience suggests to me that the reality tends to be a real mix of banded features and independent cells, with a chaining of storms seeming to be more unusual when they are elevated. Not willing to rule out Euro4 based on that alone, though!
Skipping ahead to Friday (given the lack of agreement regarding home-grown action on Thursday), we have this from WRF-NMM:
That sure is an intense system moving in from the SE in the early hours. Worryingly, GFS shows the same sort of thing taking place. WRF-NMM and GFS producee more than 100 mm from that thing alone... with not far off 130 mm in the vicinity of Reading from the NMM. I daresay they're overcooking things as usual, but even so, 50-60 mm seems a reasonable bet if such a feature does develop.
Some models have it arriving further southwest - across The Solent, for example, with similar totals shown.
The 'final act' of the low pressure system responsible for all this is the very active frontal boundary during Friday daytime. NMM throws down 30-40mm for the areas affected (these shown well by the snapshot taken above-right).
The most extreme output I've seen is from a model based on NMM that seems to also have something in common with GFS. It belongs to a rival site so I'm just going to summarise the worst of it; Thursday's elevated storms drop some 70-80 mm across western Hampshire (i.e. where I am currently in residence...), after which Friday's active frontal boundary drops another 70 mm or so. Even with the import from the SE appearing to strike east of my location, I'm still left with a projection of 140 mm or so in the space of 48 hours. About 1/5 of a typical year's rainfall.
Although my house is very well placed to avoid flooding, I sincerely hope that model is overcooking things big time. Same goes for Euro4, as 80 mm in 9 hours over a large part of west Hants would surely turn the local streams into torrents.
Edited by user
13 August 2015 13:12:22
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Reason: Amended title to reflect how things have panned out.
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