
Mesoscale Discussion 0036
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0630 PM CST Fri Jan 23 2026
Areas affected...portions of Southwest Texas
Concerning...Winter mixed precipitation
Valid 240030Z - 240430Z
SUMMARY...A mix of wintry precipitation will continue across
portions of southwestern and west-central Texas through the next
several hours.
DISCUSSION...Surface observations across southwestern Texas into
west-central Texas are showing a variety of wintry precipitation
types from light snow into the Panhandle to a mix of sleet/freezing
rain closer to the I-20 corridor. 00z sounding data from Amarillo
shows a weakening warm nose above 850mb, which supports the
transition to mostly snow across the Panhandle.
RAP forecast soundings along and south of the Red River and along
and north of I-20 continue to show a pronounced warm nose around
850-700 mb through much of the evening into tomorrow morning. This
warmer air atop sub-freezing surface temperatures will support a
predominate precipitation type of mostly light to moderate sleet and
occasional light snow north of I-20, with a transition to light
freezing rain along and south of I-20 where a deeper layer of warm
air aloft resides.
..Thornton.. 01/24/2026
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...FWD...OUN...SJT...LUB...AMA...MAF...
LAT...LON 32430265 33110200 34130103 34630035 34939957 34939903
34159817 33829790 33499772 32869778 32509840 32199934
31920027 31660094 31550168 31730243 32430265
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Mesoscale Discussion 0035
NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK
0550 PM CST Fri Jan 23 2026
Areas affected...Southern Oklahoma into far northern Texas and
southern Arkansas
Concerning...Winter mixed precipitation
Valid 232350Z - 240445Z
SUMMARY...Freezing rain and sleet accumulations are beginning across
portions of southern Oklahoma, and are expected to spread east over
the next several hours into northern/northeast Texas and southern
Arkansas as precipitation increases across the region. Freezing rain
rates up to 0.05 inch/hour appear likely along the Red River into
southern Arkansas.
DISCUSSION...Regional radar mosaics depict two plumes of moderate
precipitation with notable bright banding across western TX into
southern OK and from central TX into the Texarkana region. These
plumes are largely being driven by a combination of deep isentropic
upglide over a southward surging frontal zone and a frontogenetic
response between 925-850 mb. The forcing mechanisms are expected to
gradually shift east through late evening, which will likely result
in a prolonged period of precipitation along the Red River into
southern AR.
At the surface, mPING reports of sleet in Lawton, OK hint that
temperatures aloft (especially at around 700 mb) are likely warmer
than depicted by recent mesoanalyses and RAP forecast soundings
(implying a cold bias aloft). Recent HRRR solutions appear to be
better resolving the placement and magnitude of the warm nose aloft
(especially when compared with the recent 00z OUN sounding), and
suggest that freezing rain should be the predominant precipitation
type along/south of the Red River with increasing sleet amounts
further north into OK. Although temperatures across southeast OK and
southern AR remain above freezing as of 23:45 UTC, temperature falls
on the order of 2-3 F/hour are noted in ASOS/OK Mesonet
observations, so sub-freezing temperatures are expected within the
next 1-3 hours as precipitation overspreads the region.
Given these trends and recent model consensus, freezing rain rates
up to 0.05 inch/hour appear likely along the Red River and into
southern AR through 06 UTC. Sleet should be the primary
precipitation type with northward extent into OK with moderate to
heavy sleet accumulations probable. Given the weak (0.6 C) warm nose
at 739 mb in the recent OUN sounding, a transition zone from sleet
to moderate/heavy snow will likely manifest in the coming hours
roughly along the I-40 corridor as precipitation spreads northeast.
..Moore.. 01/23/2026
...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov for graphic product...
ATTN...WFO...JAN...LZK...SHV...TSA...FWD...OUN...
LAT...LON 33339522 33569687 33699763 33839838 34129876 34569891
34949874 35149821 35259743 35199689 35099625 34949540
34699379 34539253 34539201 34409166 34159140 33859121
33369118 33159133 33059183 33069250 33339522
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Day 1 Convective Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0637 PM CST Fri Jan 23 2026 Valid 240100Z - 241200Z ...NO SEVERE THUNDERSTORM AREAS FORECAST... ...SUMMARY... Scattered weak thunderstorm activity is possible tonight primarily across the Texas Big Bend region into central Texas. ...01z Update... Broad warm advection regime has established itself across the southern Plains into far west TX. Latest surface data suggests the polar front has surged to a position from northwest of CLL-ATT-OZA. This boundary will advance into the lower Rio Grande Valley region later tonight. Earlier thoughts continue regarding the potential for elevated convection atop the cooler air mass. Model guidance continues to suggest some risk for surface-based convection near the front later tonight. However, low-level convergence is not particularly noteworthy and updraft strength with this activity is expected to remain weak. ..Darrow.. 01/24/2026Read more

Day 3-8 Fire Weather Outlook NWS Storm Prediction Center Norman OK 0345 PM CST Fri Jan 23 2026 Valid 251200Z - 311200Z ...Synopsis... A long-wave trough will continue to translate eastward over much of the CONUS by D3/Sunday. An associated modified Arctic air-mass will encompass most of the central and eastern CONUS into D4/Monday, while precipitation shifts into the South, Mid Atlantic, and New England regions. Additional upper troughs are expected to dive southward out of central Canada throughout next week, with reinforcing cold air masses at the surface maintaining below average temperatures from the Rockies eastward. Further west, however, upper ridging is anticipated to briefly return to the Southwest and Great Basin before another Pacific trough moves onshore mid to late next week. Some precipitation may accompany this feature from CA northward into the Pacific Northwest. Generally, this pattern will keep fire weather concerns low to very low throughout the extended forecast especially across the eastern 2/3 of the CONUS. ..Barnes.. 01/23/2026 ...Please see www.spc.noaa.gov/fire for graphic product...Read more