This website works best with a newer web browser such as Chrome, Firefox, Safari or Microsoft
Edge. Internet Explorer is not supported by this website.
5-minute CONUS Sector GOES-19 (GOES-East) Visible and Infrared images (above) showed a couplet of thunderstorm cells that moved toward the South Texas coast during the afternoon hours on 01 May 2026 — which produced small hail, an EF1-rated tornado and damaging wind gusts as high as 119 mph (SPC Storm Reports | NWS Corpus Christi damage survey).GOES-19 Infrared images (below)... Read More
GOES-19 Visible images (0.64 µm, left) and Infrared images (10.3 µm, right) with time-matched (+/- 5 minutes) plots of SPC Storm Reports, from 1841-2031 UTC on 01 May [click to play animated GIF]
5-minute CONUS Sector GOES-19 (GOES-East) Visible and Infrared images (above) showed a couplet of thunderstorm cells that moved toward the South Texas coast during the afternoon hours on 01 May 2026 — which produced small hail, an EF1-rated tornado and damaging wind gusts as high as 119 mph (SPC Storm Reports | NWS Corpus Christi damage survey).
GOES-19 Infrared images (below) depicted the 3 METAR sites that were directly affected by these thunderstorm cells, and highlighted the rapid cooling followed by the warming of cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures over the course of about 1 hour.
GOES-19 Infrared (10.3 µm) images with plots of 15-minute METAR surface reports, from 1856-2006 UTC on 01 May [click to play MP4 animation]
GOES-19 Infrared (10.3 µm) image at 1931 UTC on 01 May, with a cursor sample of the coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperature [click to enlarge]
The coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperature exhibited by the northernmost storm was -80.53ºC at 1931 UTC (above) — which represented a ~3 km overshoot of the Most Unstable (MU) air parcel’s Equilibrium Level (EL) to near the Maximum Parcel Level (MPL), according to a plot of rawinsonde data from Corpus Christi at 1800 UTC (below).
Plot of rawinsonde data from Corpus Christi, Texas at 1800 UTC on 01 May [click to enlarge]
GOES-19 Water Vapor images (below) revealed rather dry middle-tropospheric air (shades of yellow to orange) just west of the severe thunderstorms.
GOES-19 Water Vapor (6.9 µm) images with time-matched (+/- 5 minutes) plots of SPC Storm Reports (cyan), from 1841-2031 UTC on 01 May; KCRP denotes the location of Corpus Christi [click to play animated GIF]
As the middle-tropospheric dry air moved eastward in the wake of the severe thunderstorms, the DCAPE at Corpus Christi increased from 866 J/kg at 1800 UTC to 1047 J/kg six hours later at 0000 UTC (below) — indicative of an increasing tendency for the downward transport of strong winds aloft to the surface.
Plots of rawinsonde data from Corpus Christi, Texas at 1800 UTC on 01 May and 0000 UTC on 02 May [click to enlarge]
Today's damage survey from Coleto Creek Rsvr southeast to Placedo and Point Comfort showed a 40 mile long swath of destructive straight-line winds of up to 120 mph as well as an EF-1 tornado southwest of Guadalupe by Jared and York Road. Read more here: https://t.co/KQAv2AuDn1pic.twitter.com/lqjLj1sTjl
One of the defining characteristics of spring in the upper midwest is a land surface that warms up much more quickly than the many lakes do. There’s a couple of reasons for this: water itself has a higher heat capacity than soil does, sun penetrates into the lakes somewhat which... Read More
One of the defining characteristics of spring in the upper midwest is a land surface that warms up much more quickly than the many lakes do. There’s a couple of reasons for this: water itself has a higher heat capacity than soil does, sun penetrates into the lakes somewhat which distributes the energy over a greater depth than is possible in land, and currents (especially in the Great Lakes) can mix cold water to the surface. This combines to create a large amount of thermal inertia and thus the lakes are slow to warm in the spring and summer compared to the surrounding land. (The opposite happens in the fall and early winter, and is a primary contributor to lake effect snow).
It doesn’t take a Great Lake to have an impact on local weather. We can see this happen even with more modestly sized lakes, and an excellent example was seen on 1 May 2026. Here is an animation from the GOES West (GOES-19) Band 2 visible imagery, depciting clouds over northern Minnesota and Wisconsin. Recall, Band 2 is the highest resolution band and is the best tool for identifying the size and extent of individual cumulus clouds during the day. Based on the direction that the clouds are moving, it’s clear that winds are from the north-northwest. However, as the clouds move over the lakes, they vanish. While it’s most apparent south of Lake Superior, many of the less pronounced lakes in Minnesota are also contributing to this downstream clearing. Even the small lakes in the southwest corner of the loop show this imapct.
So what’s going on here? In short, the colder lakes are killing the surface fluxes that contribute to buoyancy and vertical cloud development. We’ve frequently discussed lake breezes in various blog posts over the years, and while those circulations are driven by a similar difference in the land and water temperatures, that’s not quite explaining what’s happening here. If this were a lake breeze, we’d see the clearing happening on all sizes of the lake, not just the sides downstream of the prevailing synoptic flow.
CIMSS’s Community Satellite Processing Package for Geostationary Data (CSPP Geo) applies processing to geostationary satellite observations to create Level 2 products. One of these products is the land surface temperature, derived from the GOES-19 Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) infrared channels. We can use that to see just how much of a surface temperature difference is present between the lakes and the land. While it’s only possible to measure the surface temperature in clear sky conditions, the areas downwind of the lakes offer plenty of opportunity to make those measurements in a cloud-free environment. This movie shows the CSPP Level 2 land surface temperature product as displayed on the CSPP Geosphere site. Note how the lakes are a deeper blue than the surrounding land, indicating that they’re colder.
But how much colder are they? Sure, we can eyeball the temperature differences. But, crucially, CSPP also offers data readouts. All you have to do is load up a product and mouse over it, and a box will pop up telling you what the value is at that point. Here’s an animation of the CSPP-observed surface temperature for a point both over and downwind of Mille Lacs Lake in central Minnesota. This animation alternates between the two sites every five seconds, and the target point is just to the northwest of the upper left corner of the readout box. Note how over this short distance the temperature changes by 8 degrees C, or over 14 degrees F. Since cumulus clouds are driven by positively buoyant surface parcels ascending from warm surfaces, as the buoyant plumes move over the cold water, the low-level air parcels are no longer warmer than the air above them and so they stop ascending, killing the clouds.
Earlier we said that this was not a lake breeze case because the reduction in cloudiness doesn’t appear anywhere but the downstream sides of the lakes. However, that doesn’t appear to the case on the western point of Lake Superior as clearing can be seen both north and south of the lake. However, as the blog has discussed before, Duluth is an unusual place. There’s over 800 feet of elevation difference between the lake surface and the airport up on the bluffs just five miles away. That results in cold air being trapped in the Superior basin and whatever lake breeze is being created by the temperature difference finds it challenging to deeply penetrate inland to the north due to the sharp elevation difference. Here’s the Band 13 (10 micron) infrared window view focusing on greater Duluth, with surface observations overlaid on top. Note the 6 degree air temperature difference between the lake and Duluth International Airport and the lack of surface winds coming from the lake, which seems to indicate that at best the lake breeze and the larger synoptic flow have battled to a stalemate. That convergence may also explain the band of enhanced convection paralleling Superior’s north shore.The northeasterly flow at Sky Harbor in the lake basin and Superior-Bong airport may also indicate a weak lake breeze funneled up the St. Louis River valley.
The meteorological impacts of the lakes on convective growth are small, but they are noticeable. On other days in which the larger-scale atmospheric instability is greater, we may see upscaling and precipitation in other regions but a lack of convection and precipitation in the downstream locations.
1-minute Mesoscale Domain Sector GOES-18 (GOES-West) GeoColor RGB images with an overlay of Next Generation Fire System (NGFS) Fire Detection polygons (above) provided a view of the smoke plume and thermal signature associated with the Sparks Fire, which began burning in eastern New Mexico during the afternoon hours on 28 April 2026. With the NGFS Fire... Read More
1-minute GOES-18 GeoColor RGB images with/without an overlay of 1-minute NGFS Fire Detection polygons, and plots of Surface Observations, from 2100 UTC on 28 April to 0100 UTC on 29 April [click to play MP4 animation]
1-minute Mesoscale Domain Sector GOES-18 (GOES-West) GeoColor RGB images with an overlay of Next Generation Fire System (NGFS) Fire Detection polygons (above) provided a view of the smoke plume and thermal signature associated with the Sparks Fire, which began burning in eastern New Mexico during the afternoon hours on 28 April 2026. With the NGFS Fire Detection polygons removed, the narrow dark-colored burn scar of this wind-driven wildfire was more easily seen as it quickly expanded eastward (westerly winds gusted to 40 mph east of the fire, and gusted to 31 mph south-southeast of the fire). That portion of eastern New Mexico had been experiencing severe drought conditions.
The initial NGFS detection occurred at 2115 UTC (3:15 PM MDT), along a slightly elevated plateau northwest of Hassell (below).
GOES-18 GeoColor RGB image with an overlay of NGFS Fire Detection polygons and Surface Observations at 2115 UTC on 28 April, with a comparison to terrain [click to enlarge]
A partial overlap of two GOES-19 (GOES-East) Mesoscale Domain Sectors provided 30-second Visible images (above) and Infrared images (below) showing severe thunderstorms that produced two isolated tornadoes, hail as large as 4.00 inches in diameter, and wind gusts to 60 mph (SPC Storm Reports) in the St. Louis, Missouri area on 27 April 2026. These particular events occurred within... Read More
30-second GOES-19 Visible images with time-matched (+/- 3 minutes) SPC Storm Reports plotted in red, from 1830-2359 UTC on 27 April [click to play animated GIF]
A partial overlap of two GOES-19 (GOES-East)Mesoscale Domain Sectors provided 30-second Visible images (above) and Infrared images (below) showing severe thunderstorms that produced two isolated tornadoes, hail as large as 4.00 inches in diameter, and wind gusts to 60 mph (SPC Storm Reports) in the St. Louis, Missouri area on 27 April 2026. These particular events occurred within an area that SPC had highlighted as having an Moderate Risk for all 3 modes of convective severe weather.
30-second GOES-19 Infrared images with time-matched (+/- 3 minutes) SPC Storm Reports plotted in blue, from 1830-2359 UTC on 27 April [click to play animated GIF]