Patchy dense fog may occur across Northwest Georgia this morning due to clear skies, low moisture, and nearly calm winds. Drier air is expected to settle in tonight, with little cooling behind the front.

A shortwave trough is moving across the area this morning, bringing a broken line of showers and thunderstorms that are shifting east and should weaken before sunrise. A cold front is positioned from the central Great Lakes to the mid Mississippi River Valley, and it will move south and east through the area by early Sunday. High pressure will build from the northeast later on Sunday, offering minimal forcing at the surface but some potential for isolated showers and thunderstorms during the day.

For today, we will see mostly sunny skies and highs in the low 80’s.  Tonight, clear with a low of 54.

In the long term, from Sunday night through Friday, initially dry conditions early in the week will become more active by late week, with above-normal temperatures. A surface high will move south from the Northeast and settle off the Mid-Atlantic coast by Monday, promoting drier conditions, though isolated rain is possible in the west. A warming trend will begin Tuesday and continue into midweek, with rain chances increasing by Thursday and Friday as a trough approaches, necessitating monitoring for severe weather potential. Expected temperatures will rise from the upper 70s to the mid-80s by midweek, reaching up to the lower 90s.