Forecast Discussion


617
FXUS64 KMEG 031134
AFDMEG

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Memphis TN
534 AM CST Tue Mar 3 2026

...New AVIATION...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Issued at 533 AM CST Tue Mar 3 2026

- Well above normal temperatures will continue through this week,
  accompanied by increased humidity.

- Thunderstorm chances will increase late this week, likely
  peaking over the weekend. There is a potential for excessive
  rain and flooding this weekend, particularly over areas along
  and north of the Interstate 40 corridor.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
(Tonight through next Monday)
Issued at 1103 PM CST Mon Mar 2 2026

This evening`s upper air analysis features nearly zonal mid-level
flow aloft with southwest flow aloft across the Southern Plains
and Lower Mississippi Valley. Meanwhile, evening surface analysis
shows a quasi-stationary boundary bisecting the Mid-South from
West Tennessee into northwest Arkansas. Evening temperatures
range from the middle 40s to lower 50s north of the boundary, and
50s to lower 60s south. Overall confidence remains high in a
continuation of very warm temperatures into late this week across
the Mid-South with medium confidence in exact timing and location
of the heaviest rainfall this weekend.

The aforementioned surface boundary will lift north as a warm
front tonight. Short term models indicate rain chances should
mostly remain upstream of the area, mainly over southeast
Missouri and western Kentucky. Temperatures are expected to
remain 15-20 degrees well above normal into late this week with
highs in the middle 70s to around 80 degrees. Model soundings
indicate the presence of a strong capping inversion south of I-
40 during this period, which will keep mainly dry and very warm
conditions persisting across the area. Meanwhile, areas north of
I-40 will be on the western periphery of the low level ridge with
a modest increase in shower and thunderstorm chances, especially
towards northeast Arkansas and the Missouri Bootheel. There is a
low chance (20-30%) for showers and thunderstorms Wednesday
afternoon mainly west of the Mississippi River, but weak overall
shear and a capping inversion will limit the overall coverage. A
shortwave trough will move across the Middle Mississippi Valley
on Thursday bringing an increase in convective coverage north of
I-40.

Long term model trends indicate southwest flow aloft persisting
into next weekend as a shortwave departs into the Ohio Valley and
a cutoff upper-level low develops off Baja California. This upper-
level flow will favor stalling of an upstream cold front, leading
to an increased chance for several rounds of showers and
thunderstorms. Precipitable water values will approach the 99th
percentile north of I-40 with LREF probabilities indicating a
medium chance (at least 40%) for total precipitation greater than
2 inches into the weekend.

&&

.AVIATION...
(12Z TAFS)
Issued at 533 AM CST Tue Mar 3 2026

A quasi-stationary boundary extends along the MS River into NW TN
this morning. Low clouds and fog are common north and west of the
boundary. JBR will remain LIFR for the next couple of hours
before breaking out to VFR as the front lifts north. There is a
high confidence (>80%) that an MVFR will develop and cover TUP
from 14z to 18z this morning before VFR conditions return. MEM
and MKL are expected to remain VFR through tonight, though there
is a low chance (