Forecast Discussion


100
FXUS64 KMEG 232304
AFDMEG

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Memphis TN
504 PM CST Mon Feb 23 2026

...New AVIATION...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Issued at 503 PM CST Mon Feb 23 2026

- Cold temperatures are expected Tuesday morning with lows in the
  teens and 20s, with a warming trend into the 60s by midweek.

- Rain chances (70% chance or greater) will return Wednesday night
  into Thursday along a cold front. Some thunderstorm potential
  (25% to 35% chance) exists Thursday.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
(This afternoon through next Sunday)
Issued at 1203 AM CST Mon Feb 23 2026

Morning surface analysis shows a strong, 1039 mb high stretching
from Canada down to the Gulf Coast, centered northwest of the
Midsouth. Aloft, a deep longwave trough will continue to drive
the weather across the eastern CONUS via the presence of a strong
surface cyclone just off the New England coastline. Until the New
England low pressure system moves off to the east tonight,
decently strong pressure gradient forces and strong mid-level
winds will produce gusty winds through this afternoon. Current
expectations are for surface temperatures to reach into the mid
30s and low 40s, which if we are assuming a well mixed boundary
layer, would result in winds from roughly 850 mb to the potential
of mixing down. 12z radiosondes from nearby sites (OHX/LZK/JAN)
found winds between 20 - 30 knots in the SFC - 850 mb layer,
which is expected to be the magnitude of wind gusts this
afternoon. Alongside the wind, a low (< 10%) chance of flurries
is possible as a branch of elevated PVA on the western side of
the upper trough swings south through the area. Dry forecast and
observed upper air profiles preclude the explicit mention of any
flurries, but areas near bodies of water could see a few flakes
through this afternoon.

The upper trough will deamplify and travel to the east into
tomorrow, with upper ridging building in across the region. Upper
subsidence will allow tomorrow morning to remain cool with lows
in the 20s. However, as the surface high slides to our south and
east tomorrow, southerlies will return and warm the region back
up through the middle of the week. Gusty winds are expected to
return as well through the afternoon hours. HREF mean wind gusts
approach 40 mph tomorrow across West Tennessee and the
Mississippi River Delta, but is in sharp contrast to the NBM mean
wind gusts that struggle to reach 30 mph. So, have held off on a
Wind Advisory in this forecast package given the poor model-to-
model consistency, but trends will need to be monitored
overnight. Regardless, highs will be in the 50s tomorrow and in
the low to mid 60s Wednesday. In the meantime, the upper ridge
across the Central CONUS will gradually break down in response to
troughing over southern Canada.

By the time Thursday arrives, models are in agreement that low
amplitude troughing will take over across the eastern CONUS with
multiple embedded shortwaves. One of these embedded waves will
pull a weak surface low through the Plains and into the Mid-South
Wednesday night and into Thursday morning. Precipitation chances
will increase in tandem along a cold front associated with the
surface low through Thursday as it passes through the region. Per
NAEFS, PWAT values will average just above 1" (90th percentile)
with a diurnal increase in CAPE into the afternoon. So,
precipitation is expected throughout the entire CWA with an
increase in convective coverage is forecast into the afternoon
across the southeastern half of the region. However, forecast CAPE
values are rather meager (250 J/kg - 500 J/kg), which decreases
confidence in any severe storms or flash flooding chances.
Regardless, forecast QPF amounts currently range from between
0.30" west of the Mississippi River to just under 1" in our
eastern tier of counties across east West Tennessee and northeast
Mississippi, with locally higher amounts possible with eastern
extent.

The frontal passage will conclude Thursday evening and into
Friday morning. Troughing will continue across the eastern CONUS
through the end of the work week with northwesterly flow
prevailing aloft. Therefore, weak surface high pressure and upper
subsidence will keep the forecast dry into next weekend. From
this point, ensembles are in general agreement that no
significant troughing will occur to our west that would point
towards a wetter, stormier pattern. However, there is a signal in
the NBM that some WAA showers are possible (~30% chance) Sunday
and Monday next week, but with lower forecast confidence at this
point in the forecast, changes are expected in the coming days.

&&

.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 503 PM CST Mon Feb 23 2026

High confidence (80%+) for VFR conditions prevailing at all sites
through the 24-30 hr TAF cycle. A surface high centering over the
Mississippi River Valley tonight will result in light and variable
winds. As the high shifts east and a Colorado low deepens tomorrow,
south-to-southwest winds will strengthen across the Mid-South.
Sustained speeds of 10-15 kts with gusts 20-28 kts are expected by
midday and will continue through the end of the TAF cycle.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
Issued at 1203 AM CST Mon Feb 23 2026

Below average temperatures will continue today and tonight while
a dry, arctic air mass remains in place across the Mid-South.
Expect minimum relative humidity values to be in the upper 20s
and 30s today and tomorrow with elevated 20 ft winds in the 10 to
15 knot range. Southerly flow will return tomorrow, which will
bring enough moisture back by Wednesday to bring minimum relative
humidity values back above 40 percent through Thursday. Thursday
will be the next chance for wetting rains as a cold front passes
through the region.

&&


.MEG WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
AR...None.
MO...None.
MS...None.
TN...None.
&&

$$

PUBLIC FORECAST...JAB
AVIATION...JDS