With severe weather outbreak over, seasonable trend develops in Midwest, Northeast

The severe weather that hit the central U.S. is wrapped up.

For a majority of the country, a less-turbulent few days are ahead.

A weak system will move through the southern U.S. on Saturday and make its way to the mid-Atlantic by Sunday morning. There is some rain with this system and a couple of thunderstorms. However, the risk for severe weather and flash flooding remains low.

Temps cool in Northeast, heat up in Southwest

The system will also bring cooler air down from Canada into the Northeast. After several days of hot temperatures in the Northeast, readings will dip back toward seasonably cool levels in the Midwest and Northeast. The cool down should be brief, with temperatures bounding back to seasonable temperatures during the middle of the upcoming work week.

Meanwhile, in the Southwest, the heat is beginning to build. There are excessive heat watches and warnings for parts of extreme Southern California and Arizona, including Phoenix. A round of triple-digit temperatures will arrive in Phoenix and Las Vegas by the beginning of the new week. A couple of records could be challenged in Arizona on Sunday.