2.5-minute Himawari-9 Infrared images, from 0602 UTC on 18 March to 0119 UTC on 19 March [click to play animated GIF | MP4]
Himawari-9 Infrared / Water Vapor Difference images (below) exhibited large difference values — highlighting cloud tops that were significantly overshooting the tropopause.

Himawari-9 Infrared / water Vapor Difference images
Himawari-9 Infrared images with an overlay of Deep-Layer Wind Shear (below) indicated that Narelle was moving through an environment of modest shear — which, along with warm Sea Surface Temperatures favored further intensification.

Himawari-9 Infrared images, with an overlay of contours and streamlines of Deep-Layer Wind Shear at 1800 UTC on 18 March

DMSP-18 SSMIS Microwave image at 0622 UTC on 18 March
Comparing DMSP SSMIS Microwave images at 0622 UTC (above) and 2004 UTC (below), the eyewall had become more consolidated and the eye diameter contracted a bit during that time period (signatures of an intensifying tropical cyclone).

DMSP-17 SSMIS Microwave image at 2004 UTC on 18 March
===== 19 March Update =====
A Radar Constellation Mission (RCM-1) Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) wind speed image at 0847 UTC on 19 March (above) depicted a maximum of 130 kts in the SW quadrant of Narelle. A nocturnal NOAA-21 (mislabeled by AWIPS as NPP) VIIRS Day/Night Band image (above) revealed concentric mesospheric airglow waves (reference) propagating outward from Category 4 Cyclone Narelle as the storm was just east of Australia’s York Peninsula.2.5-minute Himawari-9 Infrared images, from 0602-2102 UTC on 19 March [click to play animated GIF | MP4]
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