Much of the state of Alaska is finds itself impacted by a strong atmospheric river on Friday, 16 January 2026. Moisture has been plunging due north from the tropics to the southern coast of Alaska. The river has brought with it precipitation and temperatures well above normal. One of the best ways to monitor the location and strength of an atmospheric river is with the CIMSS MIMIC-TPW product, which merges polar-orbiting and geostationary products to provide microwave-like observations of total precipitable water at a much greater frequency than is possible with the polar orbiter microwave instruments. A quick glance at the MIMIC-TPW product makes it easy to identify the area of anomalous moisture.

Zooming out enables us to see the plume in a global context. Here, it appears as a direct plume linking Alaska directly to the high moisture region of the tropical Pacific. Note that this also appears to be not the only atmospheric river that is impacting Alaska, with another plume in the north central Pacific. According to the GFS model, these two rivers are forecasted to merge over the weekend.

The impacts of this river on sensible weather are significant. Temperatures in southern Alaska are elevated compared to normal. The normal high temperature for Anchorage on January 16 is 22 F, but temperatures reached 39 F by midday. Reports from Anchorage note rain falling on snow-packed roads, creating slippery conditions despite the greater-than-freezing temperatures. Numerous avalanche warnings have also been issued in southern Alaska due to large areas of heavy rain and snow created by the atmospheric river.
The GOES-18 water vapor channels (in this case, channel 8, 6.2 microns) can also provide some insight into the strength of this event. Here, it is easy to see how the moist air is streaming north to the southern Alaska shore where it then starts dispersing into the interior of Alaska as well as the Yukon and Northwest Territories of Canada. This loop also shows the challenges associated with using geostationary imagery in polar regions: the significant displacement from the sub-satellite point over the equator means oblique viewing angles and very coarse pixel resolution; just compare the size of the pixels at the top of this loop to those at the bottom.

At these higher latitudes, polar orbiting satellites offer a promising alternative. The primary disadvantage of polar orbiters, the relatively coarse temporal resolution relative to geostationary satellites, is lessened near the poles as orbits are constantly overlapping. However, neither the United States’s VIIRS nor EUMETSAT’s AVHRR have water vapor sensitive channels, so while views of the clouds from visible or infrared imagery are possible, additional information about the water vapor distribution at the fine horizontal resolution of a polar orbiting satellite is not possible.
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