Forecast Discussion


546
FXUS64 KMEG 192341
AFDMEG

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Memphis TN
541 PM CST Mon Jan 19 2026

...New AVIATION...

.KEY MESSAGES...
Issued at 538 PM CST Mon Jan 19 2026

- Brisk mornings are expected through Wednesday with low
  temperatures tonight in the upper teens and low 20s and mid 20s
  to lower 30s Tuesday night.

- Light rain will spread into the Mid-south on Wednesday, ahead of
  cold frontal passage Wednesday night with a low (less than 20%)
  chance of wintry precipitation.

- Bitterly cold air will arrive by late week and set the stage for
  wintry weather this upcoming weekend. There is a medium chance
  of an impactful winter storm affecting the Mid-South starting
  Friday.

&&

.DISCUSSION...
(This afternoon through next Sunday)
Issued at 1158 AM CST Mon Jan 19 2026

Morning surface analysis shows a surface low over eastern Ontario
with a cold front extending south through the northeastern CONUS
and to the west into the Plains. Behind the front, a 1036 mb high
is forecast to drive the boundary through the region today.
Therefore, temperatures will only have a few hours of diurnal
heating this morning with highs only reaching into the mid to
upper 30s by noon. After the front reaches the region,
temperatures will plummet back into the low 30s by sunset.
Further advection tonight and radiational cooling will then drop
the temperatures further with lows in the low 20s and upper
teens.

The cold from today`s frontal intrusion will be short-lived as
guidance warms the region quickly Tuesday as the cold air
advection weakens. However, the larger-scale pattern aloft, which
consists of troughing over the eastern CONUS and a ridge over the
west coast, will continue to bring shortwave disturbances into
the Plains from central Canada. Current guidance indicates that
the next of these systems will arrive late Tuesday and bring
another reinforcing front south into Wednesday with a medium-high
(50% - 70%) chance for precipitation along the front. At this
time, no wintry precipitation is expected with this front and
only around .25" - .75" of rain accumulation, primarily across
north Mississippi and portions of southeastern Arkansas.

The second front will pass and stall across the region late
Wednesday and into Thursday, although it is uncertain whether or
not the region will completely dry out or not Wednesday night
into Thursday. Current NBM guidance keeps 50% - 70% PoPs across
northern Mississippi through Thursday and into Friday, while
GFS/ECMWF guidance dries the region out for a 12 - 24 hour
window. Regardless, temperatures will be above freezing through
this time frame, even with another frontal passage Thursday
night, and should limit concerns for wintry precipitation if any
moisture is able to persist through this time frame.

Ensembles and deterministic guidance are in agreement that large-
scale troughing over the eastern CONUS will remain through at
least Friday, keeping the Mid-South in a cold, active pattern. On
Friday, a strong, arctic front will dive into the northern CONUS
as a 1045+ mb high slides south out of Canada. Eventually, the
front will reach the Mid-South Friday evening, bringing well-
below-freezing temperatures. At the same time, a branch of the
subtropical stream over the eastern Pacific will become amplified
as a cutoff low develops out of the northern stream off the coast
of California. The downstream advection of moisture aloft from
the subtropical southwesterlies will then be timed optimally to
begin overrunning the cold front as it pushes through Mid-South.
Therefore, there is increasing confidence that widespread,
impactful wintry precipitation could occur starting Friday,
potentially lasting through Sunday morning.

Although there is increasing confidence that wintry precipitation
will occur this weekend, there is still significant uncertainty
in where certain p-types will occur, their magnitude/impacts, and
the timing of the front or moisture. The main discrepancy is
illustrated best by the difference in the upper pattern between
the ECMWF and GFS. The European solution is significantly more
progressive with the upper trough off the west coast while the
GFS prevents this feature from progressing east into the CONUS
through the weekend. With a more progressive pattern, a surface
low would be able to develop along the Gulf Coast, as the ECMWF
shows, and provide better forcing for precipitation and higher
wintry precipitation impacts, but if the upper pattern is less
progressive, the strong frontal intrusion will win out and
undercut the moisture too quickly for higher QPF totals. As of
the 12z GEFS and 00z LREF, ensembles are split down the middle
between both solutions, hinting that high forecast uncertainty
still exists and that the true level of any impacts may not be
well known yet for another couple of forecast cycles.

Looking into the spatial distribution of possible precipitation
types, the aforementioned uncertainties in the upper pattern come
to bear once again. Although the front will be well below
freezing, models do indicate that a warm nose aloft will be
present across the region between 850-700 mb. So, as the deep,
arctic air mass slides beneath this air, mixed-precipitation
types are likely with snow, sleet, and freezing rain expected.
However, the location of each p-type will vary depending on the
strength of any surface low development with two main scenarios
at this time. The first would be the presence of surface
cyclogenesis along the gulf coast (ECMWF/NBM solution), which
would bring stronger warm advection aloft and mixed-precipitation
(freezing rain/sleet/snow) up to I-40. The second is weaker
cyclogenesis (GFS solution), which would likely keep sleet and
freezing rain confined to northern Mississippi with lower
accumulation amounts. Again, these discrepancies are expected to
be resolved in the coming forecast cycles. So, stay tuned for
updates as they come in!

High pressure will settle in behind the front regardless of
precipitation. Temperatures will be very cold within this air
mass with highs in the 20s Saturday and Sunday, only warming into
the 30s Monday. Overnight lows will be bitterly cold as pressure
gradient winds behind the front take wind chills into the single
digits both Saturday, Sunday, and Monday morning, which may
warrant cold weather products in future forecast cycles.
Temperatures could drop even further if a large enough snow pack
is able to form from this weekend`s winter precipitation.

&&

.AVIATION...
(00Z TAFS)
Issued at 538 PM CST Mon Jan 19 2026

Confidence is high (100%) for VFR conditions persisting through
the period as a ridge of high pressure settles over the area.
Light winds will become south winds between 5-7 kts Tuesday
afternoon as high pressure moves east.

&&

.FIRE WEATHER...
Issued at 1158 AM CST Mon Jan 19 2026

Dry, polar air will persist through Monday with relative humidity
values in the 20 and 30 percent range with 20 ft winds between
5 to 10 knots. Relative humidity values will drop further Tuesday
with values in the low to mid 20s. Wetting rain chances return
Wednesday and will last through the end of the period,
particularly across northern Mississippi with an attendant
increase in humidity.

&&


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

$$

PUBLIC FORECAST...JAB
AVIATION...CJC