086 FXUS01 KWBC 021901 PMDSPD Short Range Forecast Discussion NWS Weather Prediction Center College Park MD 159 PM EST Mon Mar 02 2026 Valid 00Z Tue Mar 03 2026 - 00Z Thu Mar 05 2026 ...Frontal system to bring rain and wintry precipitation to the Mid-Atlantic today and through Tuesday morning, before moving in the Northeast on Tuesday... ...A cold front will bring strong to severe thunderstorms in parts of the Southern Plains beginning midweek... ...Warm temperatures are set to continue for much of the United States for the next several days... A frontal system located over the southern Ohio/Tennessee Valleys will continue to bring rain and wintry precipitation to the Mid-Atlantic through the evening hours tonight into the morning on Tuesday. As a warm front attempts to reorganize itself on Tuesday, it is expected to push wintry precipitation north into the parts of the Northeast beginning Tuesday morning. Winter Weather Advisories are in effect through the rest of the day today, until Tuesday morning for much of the Mid-Atlantic, with more taking effect on Tuesday for parts of the Northeast. The previously mentioned warm front will then slowly move northward through the Mid-Atlantic, extending westward through the Ohio/Tennessee Valleys and into the Mid-Mississippi Valley. This will bring showers and thunderstorms to these regions beginning on Tuesday, continuing through the middle of the week. A cold front, associated with the same low pressure system bringing rain to the Ohio, Tennessee, and Mississippi Valleys, will then form in the Southern Plains on Tuesday evening. A mid-level shortwave trough will aid in sustaining the system, pushing it along the Southern Plains through the middle of the week. A southerly low-level jet will concurrently bring in warm Gulf air into this region beginning on Tuesday evening, providing a notable influx of moisture, which will aid in the development of thunderstorms. Given this environment, the Storm Prediction Center has forecast a Slight Risk on the Convective Outlook for Wednesday in parts of the Southern Plains. These thunderstorms have the potential to bring strong winds, large hail, and a possible tornado threat. Meanwhile, warm temperatures are set to continue for much of the western half of the United States. The western portion of the Southern Plains and parts of the Southwest will be particularly warm today and Tuesday, with record high daily temperatures possible, especially on Tuesday. Further east, after the passage of the ongoing wintry precipitation event, a significant warm-up is expected to begin midweek and continue late through the week and into the weekend. This warm-up, with temperatures potentially reaching the lower 80s in the southern Mid-Atlantic, should aid in melting any stubborn snowpack that has remained in place over the last several weeks in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast. Blanco-Alcala Graphics available at https://www.wpc.ncep.noaa.gov/basicwx/basicwx_ndfd.php $$