On 14 January 2026, a strong surface pressure gradient was found over the upper Midwestern United States. This can be seen in the NOAA Weather Prediction Center surface map for 1500 UTC on this day. While the center of the low pressure system is off over southern Québec, the tight packing of the isobars over the Great Lakes region indicates that low-level winds are going to be intense throughout the region.

By suing scatterometers, satellites are particularly useful at identifying surface winds over large bodies of water, so long as they’re still liquid. While it is mid-January, the main bodies of Lakes Michigan and Superior are still wide open, so scatterometer winds can help diagnose the winds over those locations. The following plot shows the ASCAT from EUMETSAT’S MetOP-C satellite.

With winds over Lake Superior from the north,the flow has a significant amount of fetch across the lake. This allows for largely uninhibited wind speeds as little is in the way to slow the winds down, allowing them to reach speeds in excess of 40 kts in places. Of course, this is resulting in a classic lake effect event as seen on the GOES-19 True Color product. The classic parallel bands of clouds are clearly visible over much of eastern Superior.
However, if you look at the contemporaneous radar, the snow appears to me much less widespread than would be expected from the satellite coverage. The snow appears to be constrained to a relatively small-radius around the Marquette, Michigan, radar. However, this is because lake effect snows are quite shallow, often less than 1.5 km deep. Since radars have a minimum elevation angle, after a certain distance away from the radar, the beam is overshooting the altitudes where the snow is forming.

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