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There GOES 2025!

Continuing in the tradition of a post looking back on some of the most interesting events of the year as seen by GOES, here is a summary of 2025 CIMSS Satellite Blog posts. A selection of several GOES ABI loops during 2022 and 2023 and 2024 showcased the diverse range of features observed, including, but not limited... Read More

Continuing in the tradition of a post looking back on some of the most interesting events of the year as seen by GOES, here is a summary of 2025 CIMSS Satellite Blog posts. A selection of several GOES ABI loops during 2022 and 2023 and 2024 showcased the diverse range of features observed, including, but not limited to, volcanic ash plumes, hurricanes, convection, fog, smoke, fires, dust and ice.

The goal here is to show a variety of phenomena and locations that NOAA‘s GOES ABI routinely monitors. Just one highlight per month (most months, sometimes it’s hard to choose just one) and we’re covering a lot of types of events, some of which were tragic, deadly, and/or costly. Most loops generated are from the University of Wisconsin-Madison CIMSS Satellite Blog, and the original blog posts are linked if you’re interested in reading more on any of these cases. Imagery from GOES-16, -18, and -19 are showcased, along with the ABI’s three different scan sectors: Full Disk (10-min intervals), Contiguous U.S. (5-min intervals) and Mesoscale sectors (typically 1-min intervals). The GOES-R Series has more than an Imager on it though and we’ll include some Solar Ultraviolet Imager (SUVI) and Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) data as well.

First we can celebrate 2025 with some full-disk animations from GOES-East using the CIMSS Natural Color RGB enhancement. We will start with the sunset view from GOES-East from Winter Solstice 2024 (Dec 21, 2024) to Winter Solstice 2025 (Dec 21, 2025). Winter Solstice in the northern hemisphere is when the north pole reaches its maximum tilt away from the sun. Sunset for GOES-East (at the location on Earth directly below the satellite, roughly at the equator and 75W) is around 23 UTC. The exact time of sunset varies somewhat through the year, but we just chose the nominal 23:00 image for each day to make things simpler. And a handful of days are missing because of bad data.

GOES-East Winter Solstice 2024 to Winter Solstice 2025 satellite sunset animation (mp4, click to play).

Here is satellite noon in CIMSS Natural Color from GOES-East for all of 2025 (minus a handful of days with bad data). Noon for GOES-East is around 17:00 UTC.

GOES-East satellite noon animation for all of 2025 (mp4, click to play).

January

The two highlighted events for January are the wildfires in/around Los Angeles and snow across the deep south. The LA wildfires caused damages estimated to be around $300 billion and at least 31 deaths attributed directly to fire. There were multiple CIMSS blog entries, not all GOES-centric, on this event: Palisades Fire (Jan 7), NGFS detections of multiple fires in/near Los Angeles County (Jan 8), Day Night Band imagery of fires over California (Jan 9), Landsat-9 images of the Palisades Fire and Eaton Fire burn scars in Los Angeles County, California (Jan 14), and later in January the Hughes Fire near LA (Jan 22). Here is an animation of the first four days of the Los Angeles area wildfires using the ABI Fire Temperature RGB, January 7th-10th:

1-minute GOES-18 Fire Temperature RGB images, from 1810 UTC on 7th January to 2359 UTC on 10th January [click to play MP4 animation]

This historic snowstorm across the Deep South left 8 (EIGHT!) inches of snow (official measurement at the airport) in New Orleans, Louisiana.

GOES-East mp4 animation Upper Level Water Vapor infrared imagery (Band 8, 6.19 µm), 1826 UTC 19 January – 1331 UTC, 22 January 2025

February

February saw South Dakota’s first February tornado on record on February 24. This animation features both GOES-16 ABI and the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM).

5-minute GOES-16 Red Visible (0.64 µm, left) and Clean Infrared Window (10.3 µm, right) images, with/without an overlay of GLM Flash Extent Density, from 2031-2221 UTC on 24 February 2025 [click to play MP4 animation]

March

A strong solar flare captured by GOES-16 SUVI occurred on March 28th:

GOES-16 SUVI 304 angstrom images, from 1445-1659 UTC on 28 March [click to play MP4 animation]

April

GOES-19 became operational as GOES-East on April 7:

True-Color imagery from GOES-East, 1431-1531 UTC on 7 April 2025; GOES-16 through 1456 UTC; GOES-19 starting at 1506 UTC

There were several blowing dust events in April, maybe the most impressive from GOES was the blowing dust behind a cold front moving across New Mexico, Texas and Mexico on April 19th:

5-minute GOES-19 daytime True Color RGB + nighttime Dust RGB images, from 1801 UTC on 19 April to 0601 UTC on 20 April 2025.

May

Speaking of blowing dust, on May 16th, 2025 blowing dust prompts the issuance of the first Dust Storm Warning on record for the Chicago metro area:

1-minute daytime GOES-19 True Color RGB images + nighttime Dust RGB images, from 2130 UTC on 16 May to 0200 UTC on 17 May 2025.

June

In recent years we have seen more interest in the media as some part of the United States sees air quality impacts from wildfire smoke coming from Canada and 2025 was no exception. One example from June 11th was Canadian wildfire smoke over Alaska:

10-minute GOES-18 True Color RGB images (top) and Near-Infrared “Cirrus” (1.37 µm) images (bottom), from 1200 UTC on 11 June to 0500 UTC on 12 June 2025.

July

Unfortunately July 4th this year was marked with one of the deadliest flash-flooding events in US history and the deadliest of this century. Catastrophic flash flooding event in the Hill Country of Texas responsible for at least 130 fatalities:

5-minute GOES-19 Infrared (10.3 µm) images centered on Kerr County, Texas from 0001-1801 UTC on 04 July, with plots of Flood Advisories (green polygons), Flood Warnings (brighter/solid green polygons) and Flash Flood Warnings (red polygons) against County outlines — along with plots of 15-minute METAR surface report.

August

On August 16, 2025 Hurricane Erin became the earliest Category 5 hurricane on record in the Atlantic Ocean as it was north of the Leeward Islands:

1-minute GOES-19 Visible and Infrared images with plots of GOES-19 GLM Flash Points, from 1000-1700 UTC on 16 August 2025.

September

There was a lunar eclipse on September 7th. Not for us on Earth, just for GOES, when the moon temporarily blocked the view of the sun from both GOES-East and -West. Effects of a lunar eclipse on GOES-18/GOES-19 SUVI imagery:

GOES-18 SUVI Fe171 (171 Å) images, from 0652-1000 UTC on 07 September [click to play MP4 animation]

October

This year we celebrated the 50th Anniversary of the launch of GOES-1 from October 16th, 1975 with this special look at a GOES animation from each of all 50 states: Fifty Loops for the 50th Anniversary of GOES


On October 28, Hurricane Melissa made landfall on Jamaica as a devastating Category 5 hurricane.

1-minute CIMSS True Color RGB images, from 1131-2159 UTC on 28 October 2025.

November

In addition to being the 50th anniversary of the launch of GOES-1, 2025 was also the 50th anniversary of the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald. This is one of the most well-remembered weather-disasters in US history and we take a fresh look at this storm from November 10th, 1975 with modern reanalysis data and modern tools. We don’t have any GOES imagery of this storm in our possession, but we have the next best thing: Synchronous Meteorological Satellite (SMS)-2. The SMS series was an experimental series of satellites that NASA launched and operated until SMS-C became GOES-1. SMS-1, -2 and GOES-1 through -4 are all the same design.

A portion of the SMS-2 full disk infrared image at 0615 UTC (12:15 AM CST) on November 10, 1975.

With the two operational GOES, we can see over half the surface of the earth, from the west coast of the African continent to the east coast of Australia, and not quite to the north and south poles. American forecasters have responsibility across a large portion of that area and to highlight that, here is a case from November 20th of flash flooding in American Samoa, where they don’t have a radar and so satellite observations are critical.

GOES-18 Day Convection RGB from 16:11 to 18:01 UTC on November 20, 2025.

December

For the last month of the year we will highlight two events. Both of these events have gone on longer than maybe one would want or expect. There has been a long-duration Tule fog event in the Central Valley of California that started on November 21st and continued for over a month. Meanwhile Mt Kilauea in Hawaii has been erupting since December 23 of last year!

10-minute GOES-18 daytime True Color RGB and Nighttime Microphysics RGB images, from 1000 UTC on 21 November to 0000 UTC on 20 December 2025.

5-minute GOES-18 Shortwave Infrared (3.9 µm) images, from 1601 UTC on 06 December to 0701 UTC on 07 December 2025 [click to play MP4 animation]

Thank You!

To close out 2025, we would like to say thank you to all of our readers! The author would like to say a special thank you to the authors of the blogs he borrowed from today: Scott Bachmeier, Scott Lindstrom, Tim Schmit, and Tim Wagner. Thanks to all who make the GOES imagery possible, the ingest and software to display the imagery (including, but not limited to McIDAS-X, Geo2Grid, GeoSphere, RealEarth and AWIPS). Special thanks to Dave Stettner of the UW/CIMSS AWG Imagery Team.

Special note: Scott Lindstrom has retired from UW-Madison and we will miss him, especially here on the Blog!

Looking for more satellite blogs? Check out the Satellite Liaison Blog.

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Long-duration offshore transport of glacial silt from the Copper River Delta in southern Alaska

10-minute Full Disk scan GOES-18 (GOES-West) daytime True Color RGB and Nighttime Microphysics RGB images — created using Geo2Grid (above) — showed the offshore transport of glacial silt from the Copper River Delta in Southcentral Alaska from 11-23 December 2025. Even though cloud cover occasionally obscured the signature of this plume of airborne... Read More

10-minute GOES-18 daytime True Color RGB and Nighttime Microphysics RGB images, from 2000 UTC on 11 December to 0000 UTC on 24 December [click to play MP4 animation]

10-minute Full Disk scan GOES-18 (GOES-West) daytime True Color RGB and Nighttime Microphysics RGB images — created using Geo2Grid (above) — showed the offshore transport of glacial silt from the Copper River Delta in Southcentral Alaska from 11-23 December 2025. Even though cloud cover occasionally obscured the signature of this plume of airborne glacial silt, its southward transport over the northern Gulf of Alaska was occurring during the entire 13-day period.

Focusing on one particular day (18 December), a GOES-18 Near-Infrared image at 2100 UTC (below) included plots of Metop-C ASCAT surface scatterometer winds — which showed wind speeds of 35-37 kts immediately offshore of the Copper River Delta (which is located just east of Cordova, PACV). Farther inland and to the northwest, note the peak wind gust of 53 kts at Valdez (PAVW) as gap winds were being channeled down Valdez Glacier.

GOES-18 Near-Infrared “Vegetation” (0.87 µm) image at 2100 UTC on 18 December, with plots of Metop-C ASCAT wind barbs (yellow) just offshore of the Copper River Delta [click to enlarge]

Metop-B Ultra High Resolution (UHR) ASCAT winds (below) displayed the narrow plume of higher wind speeds (shades of red) that arced southward then southeastward after emerging from the Copper River Delta.

Ultra High Resolution (UHR) Metop-B ASCAT winds at 1912 UTC on 18 December [click to enlarge]

RCM-2 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) winds at 1558 UTC (below) also highlighted the plume of stronger winds (shades of yellow to red) emerging from the Copper River Delta.

RCM-2 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) image at 1558 UTC on 18 December [click to enlarge]

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Alaska surface analyses every 6 hours, from 0000 UTC on 11 December to 0000 UTC on 24 December [click to play animated GIF]

Surface analyses during the 11-23 December period (above) depicted the strong coastal pressure gradient (closely-spaced isobars) between a cold inland area of high pressure and migratory areas of low pressure over the northern Gulf of Alaska. This strong pressure gradient forced gap winds to accelerate down the Copper River Valley (topography) and emerge from the coast.

The effect of the persistent inland area of high pressure was seen in a map of surface air temperature departure (below) — which ranged from -15 to -21ºF along the coast near the Copper River Delta (medium shade of blue) to -27ºF and colder (magenta) near the Alaska/Yukon border. On 22 December, minimum temperatures were quite cold across Alaska and Yukon (and included a low of -62ºF at Chicken).

Surface air temperature departure from normal, from 11-23 December (courtesy Brian Brettschneider, NWS Alaska Region) [click to enlarge]

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Strong Gap Winds Near Alaska’s Alexander Archipelago

One of the most common sayings that a young meteorologist learns early in their education is that “air acts as a fluid.” Gap winds are an excellent illustration of that idea. As a fluid moves through a narrow passage, it has to speed up in order to ensure a constant... Read More

One of the most common sayings that a young meteorologist learns early in their education is that “air acts as a fluid.” Gap winds are an excellent illustration of that idea. As a fluid moves through a narrow passage, it has to speed up in order to ensure a constant mass flow rate, just like putting a finger on a garden hose to make a jet of water shoot faster. As air flows through gaps in mountain ranges, the ssame thing happens: the speed of the air increases so that the total mass of air keeps moving at the same rate as it was before it reached the gap.

Southeast Alaska is an ideal location for gap winds. The high, cold territory of British Columbia and the Yukon create large airmasses that flow downhill toward the Pacific Ocean. As these air masses reach southeast Alaska, they are filtered between the rugged islands of the Alexander Archipelago (the Pacific islands that comprise much of southeast Alaska’s territory). Thw air has to accelerate as it is being pushed from behind, and thus rapid winds form through and downstream of the gaps.

This can be seen in satellite products from 22 December 2025. Cross Sound is the body of water between mainland North America and Chichagof Island, the nation’s fifth largest island. The sound is at sea level, of course, but is flanked on either side by ridges that exceed 2000 feet (600 m) with only a 13 mile (20 km) gap between them. This creates a significant opportunity for gap winds. The following image shows the GOES-18 Channel 13 (infrared window) view overlaid with ASCAT winds.

Note that the winds downstream of the Cross Sound gap are 35-40 kts strong. With speeds that fast, these are officially gale force winds. Also note the cloud streets forming parallel to the winds. These are likely caused by the instability created when the cold continental air flows over the relatively warm sea. The “warm” maritime air rises to create convective clouds that are then organized by the winds into bands parallel with the flow.

As noted above, these gap winds form because the cold, dry, dense air masses of northern North America flow downhill to the sea. How cold is it? Let’s zoom out.

Here, we see the loop of GOES-18 Channel 13 imagery. The default color table in use here is designed for the continental United States. Those blues and greens represent temperatures around -40 F (-40 C) which are associated with moderately deep convection in the Lower 48. However, in the Yukon in December, those are surface temperatures. We can easily see that the Yukon is largely clear just by animating the satellite imagery. Those very cold structures are not moving, which means they’re part of the surface. Thus, we can tell that a very clear night produced bitterly cold air at the surface, a ripe setup for gap flow once that air flowed downhill to the Pacific. This animation also shows that the wind observations are only available for certain frames; this is because ASCAT is mounted aboard polar orbiting satellites and thus isn’t constantly available.

The ASCAT winds aren’t the only satellite-based wind instrument to measure the gap winds. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is another useful tool. These observations are available here and provide a nigher spatial resolution view of the surface winds over water at the expense of narrower swaths (and thus less frequent coverage). The finer spatial resolution enables us to see not only the gale force winds flowing out of the Cross Sound gap (at the top of the image) but highly localized regions of fast winds emanating from much smaller gaps as well.

A postscript: What does Chicaghof Island, Alaska, have in common with Chicago, Illinois, besides their very similar names? They’re both famous for bears! Chicaghof Island has the highest concentration of bears per unit area of any place on earth, while American football fans are quite familiar with Chicago’s Bears.

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Long-duration Tule fog event in the Central Valley of California

A 29-day sequence of 10-minute Full Disk scan GOES-18 (GOES-West) daytime True Color RGB and Nighttime Microphysics RGB images — created using Geo2Grid (above) showed the evolution of a long-duration Tule fog event across the Central Valley of California, from 21 November to 19 December 2025.The fog was more sparse in its areal coverage during the initial... Read More

10-minute GOES-18 daytime True Color RGB and Nighttime Microphysics RGB images, from 1000 UTC on 21 November to 0000 UTC on 20 December [click to play MP4 animation]

A 29-day sequence of 10-minute Full Disk scan GOES-18 (GOES-West) daytime True Color RGB and Nighttime Microphysics RGB images — created using Geo2Grid (above) showed the evolution of a long-duration Tule fog event across the Central Valley of California, from 21 November to 19 December 2025.

The fog was more sparse in its areal coverage during the initial 3 days of the period — but became more persistent and widespread beginning on 24 November. The trend of increasing dense middle to upper-level cloud cover on 19 December (associated with the arrival of an atmospheric river) began to obscure the fog across the northern 2/3 of the Central Valley.

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