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VIIRS views Severe Clear over the Great Lakes

High Pressure over the Great Lakes on 25 April meant a spectacular true-color view of the 5 Great Lakes (apologies to Lake Champlain) by the VIIRS instruments on NOAA-20. A similar view was recorded at 1755 UTC by Suomi-NPP, shown below.Clear skies also meant a determination of Lake Surface Temperatures, shown below (compare these to Monday,... Read More

VIIRS True-Color Imagery over the Great Lakes, 1816 UTC on 25 April 2024 (Click to enlarge)

High Pressure over the Great Lakes on 25 April meant a spectacular true-color view of the 5 Great Lakes (apologies to Lake Champlain) by the VIIRS instruments on NOAA-20. A similar view was recorded at 1755 UTC by Suomi-NPP, shown below.

VIIRS True-Color Imagery over the Great Lakes, 1755 UTC on 25 April 2024 (Click to enlarge)

Clear skies also meant a determination of Lake Surface Temperatures, shown below (compare these to Monday, although note the scale here is 32 to 59oF v. 32 to 50oF on Monday). Relatively cool waters persist in eastern Lake Erie, Lake Superior is uniformly cold (37 to 38oF), and a curious warm ring has developed over southern Lake Michigan, 10oF warmer at its center than the surrounding lake waters!

VIIRS True-Color Imagery over the Great Lakes, 1816 UTC on 25 April 2024, and derived ASCPO Lake Surface Temperatures, scaled from 32 to 59 F (Click to enlarge)

AWIPS-ready JPSS Tiles are created from data downloaded at the Direct Broadcast antenna at CIMSS (processed by CSPP software) and are available from an LDM feed at CIMSS. Data are also available as imagery at this ftp site, and here.


Sometimes, warm water observations occur because of the reflection of solar radiation (although that should be accounted for in ACSPO algorithms as sunglint location can be calculated). In this case you don’t see glint in the True Color, and the I04 imagery doesn’t show spectacular warmth. The GOES-16 Land Surface Temperature does show a warm eddy moving westward across the Lake however, at fairly high speed! That earns this post the “What the heck is this?” tag!

GOES-16 Land Surface Temperature fields, hourly from 1501 to 2101 UTC on 25 April 2024, scaled from 32 to 68F (Click to enlarge)

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NOAA-20 VIIRS Sea Surface Temperature and Near-Infrared Vegetation (0.87 µm) images at 1816 UTC, with plots of 1800 UTC mesoEta215 model Surface Wind barbs in red, Mean Sea Level Pressure isobars in yellow and METAR/Maritime surface reports in cyan (courtesy Scott Bachmeier, CIMSS) [click to enlarge]

Has this type of warm-water feature appeared in Lake Michigan before? The answer is yes: such isolated warm water features are often associated with areas of very light winds — usually beneath the center of high pressure at the surface — which allows the relatively calm water surface to warm more rapidly. These areas of light winds will exhibit a darker appearance in Visible imagery — or in this case on 25 April, Near-Infrared imagery (above). The warmest VIIRS Sea Surface Temperature value was 52.73ºF, near the apparent center of the surface high pressure (judging by the model surface wind barbs). Details of 2 similar Lake Michigan events are available in previous blog posts here and here.

Although it was about 6 hours earlier than the NOAA-20 VIIRS images, an overpass of RCM-3 provided Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery (source) which displayed lighter wind speeds (darker shades of blue) in southern Lake Michigan (below).

RCM-3 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) image at 1201 UTC [click to enlarge]


The animation below shows GOES-16 Hourly Land Surface Temperature fields from 1400 UTC 25 April 2024 through 0200 UTC 26 April 2024. That important central Lake Michigan observation appears to be part of the Great Lakes Observing System (link). A curious aspect of the in situ observations is that they are cooler than the sensed surface temperature as the warm lens of water moves through (up through 1900 UTC), but at 2000 and 2100 UTC, the buoy temperatures are warmer than the satellite-derived product.

GOES-16 Skin Temperatures, 1401 UTC 25 April through 0100 UTC 26 April 2024 (Click to enlarge)

Data from the Spotter Buoy are available here. Data include observed significant wave heights and pressure, and Lake Temperatures. The monthly temperature trace is shown below, highlighting the intense character of this feature. (Daily and Weekly traces are also available).

South Michigan Spotter Buoy (SPOT-31302C) observed Lake Surface temperatures, 28 March – 26 April 2024 (Click to enlarge)

Significant wave heights during this time were minimal — generally less than 1 foot. The barometric pressure at the buoy started falling around 1500 UTC. (Direct wind observations at the buoy site are not available).

Significant Wave heights (left) and Air Pressure (right) at South Michigan Spotter Buoy 31302C, times (CDT) as indicated (Click to enlarge)

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Record Daily Rainfall on Guam

An extended dry period over the Marianas Islands was broken (at least temporarily) on 24 April when training thunderstorms dropped more than 5 inches of rain at the Guam airport. The US Drought Monitor data for the Marianas is shown below. Guam and Saipan both show extreme drought. Before the rain on 24 April, Guam year-to-date rains were 50% of normal.... Read More

Himawari-9 Airmass RGB Imagery, 1600 UTC 23 April 2024 – 0500 UTC 24 April 2024 (Click to enlarge)

An extended dry period over the Marianas Islands was broken (at least temporarily) on 24 April when training thunderstorms dropped more than 5 inches of rain at the Guam airport. The US Drought Monitor data for the Marianas is shown below. Guam and Saipan both show extreme drought. Before the rain on 24 April, Guam year-to-date rains were 50% of normal. Persistent drought over the islands means that the heavy rains that fell likely did not percolate into the soil, instead becoming run-off. The airmass RGB above shows the evolution of the strong storms especially between 1800 and 2230 UTC. (Click here for a slower animation during that time). Visible imagery after sunrise (below) shows the strong thunderstorms as well.

Drought Monitor data over the Marianas and Micronesia, 23 April 2024 (click to enlarge)

Himawari-9 Visible (Band 3, 0.64 µm) imagery, 2000 UTC 23 April – 0500 UTC 24 April 2024 (Click to enlarge)

MetopB overflew Guam shortly after 0000 UTC on 24 April, as shown below. Surface winds at that time show stronger trades approaching from the east. Note that Metop-B viewed this region of the Pacific twice on 24 April, once at 0010 UTC, and once at 2350 UTC as shown in this image of the MetopB orbits on 24 April; (source) the left-most swath and the swath over Guam are from the early overpass; the other two swaths are from the later overpass.

MetopB ASCAT winds over Guam ca. 0011 UTC on 24 April 2024 (Click to enlarge) Note that the 2350 UTC 24 April 2024 overpass is also plotted both to the east and the west of the swath over Guam!

Himawari-9 data are available in RealEarth. The loop below shows the clean window infrared imagery (Band 13, 10.4 µm) from 1800 to 2200 UTC on 23 April. The coldest cloud tops occurred around 2020/2030 UTC. Cloud-top warming was widespread after 2130 UTC.

Himawari-9 Clean Window Infrared (band 13, 10.4 µm), 1800-2200 UTC on 23 April 2024 (click to enlarge)

The Direct Broadcast antenna at the forecast office on Guam received data from a variety of polar orbiting satellites, including MetopB/MetopC. Rain rate data derived (using CSPP software) from data on the microwave sounders (AMSU-A/MHS) on board those satellites is shown below. Values are not particularly large by 0000 UTC on the 24th, compared to the values to the south in the ITCZ, for example. It continues to show light rainfall diagonally across Guam however.

AMSU/MHS MIRS Rain Rate, 2317 UTC 23 April and 0005 UTC 24 April 2024 (Click to enlarge) (Imagery courtesy Douglas Schumacher)

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Prescribed burns in the Florida Panhandle

5-minute CONUS Sector GOES-16 (GOES-East) “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images (above) included an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product (a component of the GOES Fire Detection and Characterization Algorithm FDCA) — which showed the smoke plumes and thermal signatures associated with prescribed burns in the Florida Panhandle on 22 April 2024.Once the... Read More

GOES-16 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images with an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

5-minute CONUS Sector GOES-16 (GOES-East) “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images (above) included an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product (a component of the GOES Fire Detection and Characterization Algorithm FDCA) — which showed the smoke plumes and thermal signatures associated with prescribed burns in the Florida Panhandle on 22 April 2024.

Once the smoke plumes extended about 20-30 miles offshore, their signature became apparent in the GOES-16 Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) derived product (below) — AOD values exceeded 1.0 (darker red pixels) within the easternmost smoke plume.

GOES-16 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images with an overlay of the Fire Mask and Aerosol Optical Depth derived products [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

GOES-16 True Color RGB images from the CSPP GeoSphere site (below) provided a clearer view of the 2 dominant smoke plumes (along with a few other less-pronounced smoke plumes from smaller fires).

GOES-16 True Color RGB images [click to play MP4 animation]

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Satellite Images of the Sun (on April 8th)

There are several satellites that routinely image the Sun, to support Space Weather. Due to the recent total solar eclipse, there has been much interest in the Sun. SUVIThe GOES-R series also has a number of space weather instruments, including the SUVI (Solar UV Imager). The above images are via the UW/SSEC ingest... Read More

There are several satellites that routinely image the Sun, to support Space Weather. Due to the recent total solar eclipse, there has been much interest in the Sun.

SUVI

The GOES-R series also has a number of space weather instruments, including the SUVI (Solar UV Imager).

GOES-16 SUVI images (He 303) on April 8, 2024.
GOES-16 SUVI images (Fe 171) on April 8, 2024. (Click to Play)

The above images are via the UW/SSEC ingest of NOAA’s GOES-16 SUVI data via the GOES Re-Broadcast (GRB).

SDO

Images from NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO).

Some of the spectral bands on the SDO on April 8, 2024. (Click to Play)

A similar loop, including RGB composites. “Courtesy of NASA/SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams.” More SDO images.

LASCO

The Large Angle and Spectrometric COronagraph (LASCO) is on instrument on the joint NASA/ESA SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) spacecraft.

LASCO C2 image from April 8, 2024 at 19 UTC.

“Courtesy of SOHO/LASCO consortium. SOHO is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.” This image was obtained here.

GOES-U will fly a compact coronagraph.

H/T

Thanks to many for this post, including Rick Kohrs (UW/SSEC) and Dr. Ryan French.

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