Elevated smoke levels have been present in the upper Midwestern United States for well over a week, but recent synoptic-scale pattern shifts have started to bring in clearer (albeit warmer and more humid) air from the south. The following animation shows GOES-19-observed aerosol optical depth (AOD) for 1400 UTC (9:00 AM local time) for each day between 25 July and 8 August 2025. Even as far back as the beginning of this loop, Wisconsin, Michigan, and the western Great Lakes are shown to have very high levels of smoke.
The smoke has not disappeared from the midlatitudes of the northern hemisphere; it has simply propagated out to sea. The same aerosol optical depth product (this time viewing a larger portion of the GOES-19 disk) shows that very high levels of aerosol remain. While the air over the midwestern United States is in better shape, the same cannot be said for the northeastern United States and the maritime provinces of Canada. (Note: the high AOD in the lower right hand corner, behind the SSEC logo, is Saharan dust that has blown off into the Atlantic.)

The poor air quality observed by satellite can be verified by looking at a contemporaneous map of in situ air quality observations. The following image depicts PM2.5 s observed by the global network of in situ PurpleAir sensors. While not a governmental network, PurpleAir has the advantage of transcending national borders. There is clearly a strong relationship between the satellite-identified regions of high AOD and surface-based data.

This change in air quality was largely driven by shifts in the synoptic scale flow. Consider the two 500 mb charts displayed side by side. The one on the left is from 1200 UTC on 2 August 2025 while the right is from the same time but on 8 August 2025. For the earlier map, when air quality was at its worst for the Midwest, a high amplitude ridge was present over the western United States and the prairies of Canada. Temperatures were cool and dew points were lower than typical for early August, but the air was originating from the Canadian wildfires and advecting smoke into the central United States. Contrast that with the later map. A ridge is now present over the upper midwest, bring with it heat and humidity, but also air from smoke-free regions.

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