468  
FXUS64 KJAN 061030  
AFDJAN  
 
AREA FORECAST DISCUSSION  
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE JACKSON MS  
530 AM CDT WED MAY 6 2026  
   
..NEW DISCUSSION  
 
   
KEY MESSAGES  
 
 
- ISOLATED SEVERE STORMS REMAIN POSSIBLE IN THE NORTHWEST DELTA  
EARLY THIS MORNING.  
 
- SEVERE STORMS CAPABLE OF PRODUCING TORNADOES, SOME POSSIBLY  
STRONG, DAMAGING WINDS AND LARGE HAIL, ARE LIKELY THIS AFTERNOON  
INTO EARLY THURSDAY.  
 
- LOCALLY HEAVY RAINFALL AND AREAS OF FLOODING ARE LIKELY, WITH  
FURTHER DROUGHT RELIEF EXPECTED.  
 
 
   
DISCUSSION  
 
ISSUED AT 529 AM CDT WED MAY 6 2026  
 
TODAY THROUGH EARLY NEXT WEEK...  
 
TODAY AND THURSDAY: WATER VAPOR AND SYNOPTIC IMAGERY EARLY THIS  
MORNING DEPICT LONGWAVE TROUGH AXIS STRETCHED FROM BAJA PENINSULA TO  
DESERT SOUTHWEST AND EXTENDING NORTHEAST TO THE COLD CORE OVER  
EASTERN CANADA AND THE HUDSON BAY AREA. THIS IS HELPING  
SOUTHWESTERLY FLOW BECOME ENTRENCHED IN THE AREA AND MOIST ASCENT TO  
CONTINUE TO FEED INTO THE AREA. GOES EAST SATELLITE DERIVED TOTAL  
PRECIPITABLE WATER (PWS) INDICATE MOIST ASCENT HAS REALLY MOISTENED  
THE DEEP ATMOSPHERIC COLUMN (AROUND ONE AND A HALF INCHES TO ONE AND  
THREE QUARTER INCHES). THIS IS DRIVING WIDESPREAD CLOUDINESS ACROSS  
THE REGION, WITH FRONTAL ZONE DRAPED ACROSS CENTRAL TX INTO THE  
ARKLATEX AND MID SOUTH. THERE CONTINUES TO BE JUXTAPOSITION OF LAPSE  
RATES, DESTABILIZATION ALOFT (MUCAPE AROUND 1000 J/KG) AND DEEP  
LAYER EFFECTIVE BULK SHEAR (50-55KTS) TO SUPPORT A LOW END SEVERE  
THREAT THROUGH DAYBREAK IN THE DELTA. THERE IS SOME CONVECTION  
ONGOING ACROSS SOUTHEAST AR THAT MAY SUPPORT SOME ISOLATED SEVERE  
STORMS, WITH DAMAGING WIND GUSTS AND HAIL THREAT, THROUGH DAYBREAK.  
WILL CONTINUE THE ONGOING HWO SEVERE GRAPHIC THIS MORNING.  
 
MAIN CONCERNS TURNS TO THE SEVERE STORMS EXPECTED AND HEAVY RAIN AND  
FLASH FLOOD POTENTIAL THIS AFTERNOON INTO TONIGHT. AS THE FRONT SAGS  
SOUTHWARD THROUGH TODAY, MOIST ASCENT WILL BRING INCREASED COVERAGE  
OF RAIN AND STORM COVERAGE WILL BEGIN TO PICK UP INTO THE AFTERNOON.  
BROAD ZONE OF INCREASED DEEP LAYER SHEAR (0-1KM AROUND 20-30KTS, 0-  
3KM AROUND 35-40KTS AND 0-6KM AROUND 55-70KTS), STEEPENING LAPSE  
RATES/VERTICAL TOTALS AND DESTABILIZATION (1500-2500 J/KG MLCAPE AND  
2500-3500 J/KG MUCAPE). THIS ENVIRONMENT WILL SUPPORT A STORM MODE  
OF PREDOMINATELY SUPERCELL AND BOWING SEGMENTS, WITH SOME SPLITTING  
CELL STORM MODE AS WELL. ALL MODES OF SEVERE WEATHER REMAIN LIKELY,  
INCLUDING TORNADOES, DAMAGING WIND GUSTS UP TO 70MPH AND LARGE HAIL  
UP TO GOLF BALL SIZE. WITH AN INCREASE IN THE LOW-LEVEL JET (LLJ)  
INTO THE AFTERNOON TO EVENING, A RAMP UP IN TORNADO POTENTIAL WILL  
INCREASE ON THE EDGE OF A SIGNIFICANT TORNADO PARAMETER (STP)  
GRADIENT. THIS GRADIENT HAS SHIFTED FROM THE NORTHERN HALF OF THE  
NATCHEZ TRACE CORRIDOR TO FURTHER SOUTHWARD INTO THE INTERSTATE 20  
CORRIDOR. CONVECTIVE ALLOWING MODELS, INCLUDING THE HRRR, ARW AND  
FV3, AND ENSEMBLES (REFS AND HREF), ARE NARROWING THE CORRIDOR  
CLOSER TO ALONG AND SOUTH OF THE INTERSTATE 20 CORRIDOR. THERE WILL  
BE LARGE ELEVATED MIXED LAYER (EML) CAPPING INVERSION THAT WILL  
GRADUALLY ERODE WITH DAYTIME HEATING AND MIXING OF THE PLANETARY  
BOUNDARY LAYER (PBL) AND AS ASCENT WEAKENS THE CAP. CONVECTIVE  
INITIATION (CI) SHOULD DEVELOP AROUND 1-3PM, WITH THE PRIMARY SEVERE  
WEATHER THREAT AFTER AROUND 3-4PM ONWARD. THIS WILL ONLY HEIGHTEN AS  
THE LLJ INCREASES INTO THE EVENING, WITH THE STRONG TORNADO  
POTENTIAL BECOMING HEIGHTENED IN THIS TIMEFRAME INTO LATE AFTERNOON  
AND EVENING HOURS. RECENT MODEL TRENDS IN UPDRAFT HELICITY (UH)  
TRACKS HAVE SHIFTED SOUTHWARD TO ALONG AND SOUTH OF THE INTERSTATE  
20 TO HIGHWAY 84 CORRIDORS. BASED ON THAT AND WITH RECENT  
COORDINATION WITH SPC, ADJUSTED THE HWO GRAPHIC FOR SEVERE STORMS  
(ENHANCED RISK AREA) GRAPHIC SLIGHTLY SOUTHWEST TO ACCOUNT FOR SOME  
CI AND UH TRACKS NEAR THE MS RIVER CORRIDOR AND AS FAR SOUTHWARD AS  
NEAR HIGHWAY 84 TO INTERSTATE 59 CORRIDORS. ALSO PULLED ALL OF THE  
PINE BELT INTO THE SLIGHT RISK AREA. THIS SHOULD PERSIST THROUGH  
AROUND MIDNIGHT TO 1AM, BUT CANNOT RULE OUT SOME POTENTIAL  
PERSISTING INTO THE OVERNIGHT HOURS. SOME WESTERLY SHEAR AND  
DESTABILIZATION MAY REINVIGORATE INTO THURSDAY AFTERNOON, BUT RECENT  
TRENDS HAVE PUSHED THE BOUNDARY SOUTHWARD TOWARDS THE GULF COAST. NO  
HWO GRAPHICS ARE NEEDED FOR THURSDAY.  
 
DEEP MOISTURE WILL PEAK TODAY INTO THURSDAY (AROUND 2 TO 2.25 INCH  
PRECIPITABLE WATER AND 340-345K 850MB THETA E) COMBINED WITH STRONG  
CLOUD BEARING LAYER FLOW AROUND 45-50KTS AND SOMEWHAT OF A SLIGHT  
RIDGE OF BACKBUILDING VECTORS, ALBEIT AROUND 20KTS, WILL LIKELY  
RESULT IN SOME FLASH FLOODING CONCERNS BEING LIKELY. RECENT CAMS AND  
HREF/REFS RUNS INDICATE SOME HIGHER RAINFALL ACCUMULATIONS, OF 3-5  
INCHES, WITH AS HIGH AS EXCEEDING 6-8 INCHES IN EAST TO SOUTHEAST  
MISSISSIPPI AROUND THE INTERSTATE 59 CORRIDOR. PROBABILITIES OF  
RAINFALL TOTALS EXCEEDING 3 TO 5 INCHES ARE REASONABLE (40 TO 70  
PERCENT GREATER THAN 3-4 INCHES AND AROUND 30 PERCENT GREATER THAN 5  
INCHES). HREF NEIGHBORHOOD PROBS TO EXCEED 3 INCHES (AROUND 30  
PERCENT) OVER THE NATCHEZ TRACE CORRIDOR SOUTHEAST INTO THE HIGHWAY  
84 TO INTERSTATE 59 CORRIDORS INDICATE POTENTIAL FOR FLASH FLOODING  
BEING HEIGHTENED, ESPECIALLY AS THE TOTALS COULD APPROACHED SOME  
LOCALIZED PROBABILISTIC MATCH MEAN (LPMM) VALUES AROUND 5 INCHES AND  
MAXIMUM VALUES IN EXCESS OF 6-8 INCHES. BASED ON THAT, ADDED AN  
ELEVATED IN THE NATCHEZ TRACE TO NORTH OF HIGHWAY 84 TO INTERSTATE  
59 CORRIDORS. AREAS OF FLOODING WILL BE LIKELY, ESPECIALLY IN URBAN  
LOCATIONS, WHERE RAINFALL TOTALS ACCUMULATE RAPIDLY IN A SHORT  
DURATION, WHICH COULD FLOOD ROADS OR STRUCTURES. BASED ON THE HIGH  
RAINFALL DURATION IN THESE AREAS, SOME QUICK RISES ON AREA RIVERS  
COULD APPROACH ACTION OR MINOR STAGES IF THE HIGHER END TOTALS ARE  
REALIZED. OTHERWISE THIS RAIN WILL BE A MUCH NEEDED REPRIEVE IN THE  
LONG DURATION RAINFALL DEFICITS THAT HAVE BEEN OBSERVED. RAIN WILL  
SHIFT SOUTHWARD INTO THURSDAY NIGHT BUT STALL ACROSS THE GULF COAST  
AREAS INTO LATE WEEK.  
 
SEASONABLE WARMTH THIS MORNING WILL TURN TO SEASONABLY COOL DURING  
THE MID TO LATE WEEK PERIOD ON THURSDAY.  
 
LATE WEEK THROUGH EARLY NEXT WEEK (FRIDAY THROUGH NEXT TUESDAY): RAIN  
CHANCES BEGIN TO SHIFT SOUTHEAST INTO LATE WEEK. SYNOPTIC AND SURFACE  
FEATURES WILL CONSIST OF CUTOFF LOW ALOFT NEAR THE INTERNATIONAL  
BORDER WITH FRONTAL ZONE SHIFTING SOUTHEAST INTO THE NORTHERN  
GULF. THIS WILL KEEP SOME RAIN CHANCES ALONG THE NATCHEZ TRACE  
THROUGH BEFORE DAYBREAK FRIDAY, WITH HIGHEST COVERAGE INTO THE  
PINE BELT TO HIGHWAY 84 TO INTERSTATE 59 CORRIDORS BUT SHIFTING  
NORTHWARD INTO THE INTERSTATE 20 CORRIDOR THROUGH THE DAY. AS  
SHORTWAVE TROUGH SWINGS INTO THE ARLATEX INTO THE WEEKEND, EXPECT  
RAIN COVERAGE TO PICK UP SATURDAY AND INTO SUNDAY (25 TO 55  
PERCENT) AHEAD OF ANOTHER FRONT.  
 
TEMPERATURE FORECAST BECOME MORE SEASONABLE AS RETURN FLOW GRADUALLY  
SHIFTS AROUND INTO THE WEEKEND (HIGHS IN UPPER 70S FRIDAY TO LOW TO  
MID 80S SATURDAY AND SUNDAY TO MID TO UPPER 80S SUNDAY AND LOWS IN  
UPPER 50S TO LOW 60S FRIDAY NIGHT TO LOW TO MID 60S SATURDAY AND  
SUNDAY NIGHT). AS SHORTWAVE BECOMES ABSORBED IN THE DEVELOPING  
TROUGH AND DEEPENING AXIS OVER THE REGION, THIS WILL HELP DRIVE  
CLEARING FRONT THROUGH THE AREA AND RAIN CHANCES OUT LIKELY BY EARLY  
TO MIDDAY MONDAY OF NEXT WEEK. HIGH PRESSURE AND SEASONABLY COOL  
CONDITIONS WILL BUILD IN THE WAKE. /DC/  
 
 
   
AVIATION  
 
(06Z TAFS)  
ISSUED AT 1242 AM CDT WED MAY 6 2026  
 
SOME MVFR CEILINGS HAVE MOVED IN THROUGHOUT THE AREA, AND ARE  
EXPECTED TO CONTINUE TO BUILD IN ACROSS MOST SITES TONIGHT INTO  
EARLY MORNING. LATER ON SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED TO  
BUILD INTO THE AREA WITH A DECENT POTENTIAL FOR SEVERE  
CHARACTERISTICS THROUGHOUT THE AREA AROUND 20Z FOR MOST SITES,  
SHOWERS COULD PRECEDE THUNDER, BUT FOR THE MOST PART ONCE  
PRECIPITATION STARTS, THUNDER IS EXPECTED TO FOLLOW SHORTLY  
AFTER. CEILINGS COULD DIP DOWN INTO LIFR/IFR RANGE INTERMITTENTLY  
OVERNIGHT TONIGHT, A FIRM EYE WILL BE KEPT ON TRENDS TO ENSURE  
FORECAST REPRESENTS CURRENT AND EXPECTED CONDITIONS./OAJ/  
 
 
   
PRELIMINARY POINT TEMPS/POPS  
 
JACKSON 83 63 74 58 / 80 100 10 10  
MERIDIAN 83 65 77 56 / 80 100 20 10  
VICKSBURG 84 60 73 57 / 90 90 0 10  
HATTIESBURG 84 69 80 61 / 80 90 60 30  
NATCHEZ 85 64 75 60 / 90 100 20 30  
GREENVILLE 72 56 71 54 / 100 90 0 0  
GREENWOOD 77 58 73 54 / 100 90 0 0  
 
 
   
JAN WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES  
 
MS...NONE.  
LA...NONE.  
AR...NONE.  
 
 
 
 
DC/OAJ  
CLICK HERE TO GO TO PREVIOUS BULLETINS.
The Nexlab MS Page
The Nexlab AR Page
The Nexlab LA Page
Main Text Page