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Cyclone Maila rapidly intensifies to a Category 4 storm near the Soloman Islands

10-minute Full Disk scan JMA Himawari-9 AHI Infrared images (above) showed Cyclone Maila as it rapidly intensified to a Category 4 storm (ADT | SATCON) just southwest of the Soloman Islands on 07 April 2026.A 2.5-minute Himawari-9 Target Sector was positioned over Maila until 1449 UTC — which provided a... Read More

10-minute Himawari-9 Infrared (10.4 µm) images, from 0000 UTC on 07 April to 0000 UTC on 08 April [click to play animated GIF]

10-minute Full Disk scan JMA Himawari-9 AHI Infrared images (above) showed Cyclone Maila as it rapidly intensified to a Category 4 storm (ADT | SATCON) just southwest of the Soloman Islands on 07 April 2026.

A 2.5-minute Himawari-9 Target Sector was positioned over Maila until 1449 UTC — which provided a smoother depiction of the evolution of Maila’s eye during rapid intensification (below). The coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures were -90ºC and colder (yellow pixels embedded within dark purple areas) — for example, at 0107 UTC and 0912 UTC. No -90ºC pixels were seen in the 10-minute Full Disk scan Infrared images, highlighting the value of 2.5-minute Target Sector imagery for capturing subtle details.

2.5-minute Himawari-9 Infrared (10.4 µm) images, from 0002-1449 UTC on 07 April [click to play animated GIF]

Maila had been moving through an environment characterized by low values of deep-layer wind shear (below), a factor which favored intensification.

Himawari-9 Infrared (11.2 µm) images with an overlay of streamlines and contours of deep-layer wind shear at 2100 UTC

Microwave imagery from DMSP-18 (below) displayed the eyewall structure of Maila — which was partially eroded along its eastern edge at that time.

DMSP-18 SSMIS Microwave (85 GHz) image at 1749 UTC on 07 April

A Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) image from RCM-3 (below) sampled wind speeds as high as 118 kts in the NW quadrant of Maila.

RCM-3 SAR wind image at 1914 UTC on 07 April [click to enlarge]

A toggle between VIIRS Day/Night Band images from NOAA-20 and NOAA-21 (below) highlighted the eye and eyewall of Maila after sunrise on 08 April — with deep convection very prominent within the eastern semicircle of the eyewall.

VIIRS Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) images from NOAA-20 and NOAA-21 (mislabeled by AWIPS as NPP) [click to enlarge]

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Prescribed burning in the Flint Hills of Kansas and Oklahoma

5-minute CONUS Sector GOES-19 (GOES-East) “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images (above) included an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product (a component of the GOES Fire Detection and Characterization Algorithm FDCA), which depicted the areal coverage and diurnal behavior of thermal signatures associated with widespread prescribed burning in the Flint Hills of eastern... Read More

5-minute GOES-19 Visible images with an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product, plus hourly plots of Ceiling and Visibility (cyan), from 1406 UTC on 06 April to 0001 UTC on 07 April; Interstate highways are plotted in violet [click to play MP4 animation]

5-minute CONUS Sector GOES-19 (GOES-East) “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images (above) included an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product (a component of the GOES Fire Detection and Characterization Algorithm FDCA), which depicted the areal coverage and diurnal behavior of thermal signatures associated with widespread prescribed burning in the Flint Hills of eastern Kansas and northern Oklahoma on 06 April 2026.

A plot of surface report data from Emporia, Kansas (below) showed that smoke reduced the surface visibility to 3 miles during the late afternoon hours (at 2300 UTC), and 2.5 miles a few hours after sunset (at 0300 UTC).

Plot of surface report data from Emporia, Kansas (KEMP), from 1400 UTC on 06 April to 0500 UTC on 07 April [click to enlarge]

5-minute GOES-19 True Color RGB images from the CSPP GeoSphere site (below) offered a clearer view of the smoke plumes across eastern Kansas and northern Oklahoma. There was also a dense smoke plume originating from another area of prescribed burn activity in the vicinity of the Missouri/Arkansas border.

5-minute GOES-19 True Color RGB images, from 1401 UTC on 06 April to 0001 UTC on 07 April [click to play MP4 animation]

5-minute GOES-19 GeoColor RGB images with an overlay of Next Generation Fire System (NGFS) Fire Detection polygons (below) provided a more integrated depiction of the fire thermal signatures and smoke plumes.

5-minute GOES-19 GeoColor RGB images with an overlay of NGFS Fire Detection polygons — with/without map labels — from 1401 UTC on 06 April to 0001 UTC on 07 April [click to play MP4 animation]

===== 07 April Update =====

5-minute GOES-19 Visible images with an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product, plus hourly plots of Ceiling and Visibility (cyan), from 1346 UTC on 07 April to 0001 UTC on 08 April; Interstate highways are plotted in violet [click to play MP4 animation]

Flint Hills prescribed burning continued on 07 April, as seen in GOES-19 Visible images with an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product (above).

A Pilot Report 12 miles SW of Emporia, Kansas at 2055 UTC (below) mentioned that the flight visibility at an altitude of 6000 ft was 4 statute miles due to smoke (the 2100 UTC surface visibility at Emporia KEMP was 7 statute miles — indicating that the bulk of the smoke was aloft).

GOES-19 Visible image with an overlay of the Fire Mask derived product, plus plots of Ceiling and Visibility (cyan), at 2056 UTC on 07 April — with a cursor sample of a 2055 UTC Pilot Report (green) [click to enlarge]

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Welcome to Space, Artemis II!

For the first time since the early 1970s, humans are on their way to the moon. A partly cloudy sky over Cape Canaveral and Florida’s Space Coast provided a perfect backdrop for GOES-19 mesoscale imagery. Watch the True Color RGB imagery as the most powerful rocket that NASA has ever... Read More

For the first time since the early 1970s, humans are on their way to the moon. A partly cloudy sky over Cape Canaveral and Florida’s Space Coast provided a perfect backdrop for GOES-19 mesoscale imagery. Watch the True Color RGB imagery as the most powerful rocket that NASA has ever built shoots eastward across the Atlantic and towards its lunar destination.

The 3.9 micron channel, normally used for fires, can also be used to track the rocket in flight as long the solid rocket boosters and main engines are firing. This loop is the same time and area as the true color image above, but the rocket is shown as the large, rapidly moving dark (hot) spot.

This is also an interesting application for GOES CSPP Level 2 products. Here’s the cloud height product for shortly after launch. The plume is easily over 10000 m right after launch according to this algorithm.

On 6 April 2026, the astronauts will fly around the moon and be further from Earth than any humans have ever been.

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Satellite signatures of the Artemis II launch

Overlapping 1-minute Mesoscale Domain Sectors provided 30-second imagery from GOES-19 (GOES-East) to support the launch of Artemis II — and Rocket Plume RGB images created using Geo2Grid (above) displayed both the initial hot thermal signature of the NASA Space Launch System (SLS) Core Stage rocket booster near the Kennedy Space Center launch site (brighter red pixels: 2235 UTC) in... Read More

30-second GOES-19 Rocket Plume RGB images, from 2234-2241 UTC on 01 April [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

Overlapping 1-minute Mesoscale Domain Sectors provided 30-second imagery from GOES-19 (GOES-East) to support the launch of Artemis II — and Rocket Plume RGB images created using Geo2Grid (above) displayed both the initial hot thermal signature of the NASA Space Launch System (SLS) Core Stage rocket booster near the Kennedy Space Center launch site (brighter red pixels: 2235 UTC) in addition to the later high-altitude thermal signature of moisture-laden rocket exhaust (brighter shades of green: 2239 UTC) as the spacecraft moved quickly eastward away from Florida after launch at 22:35:12 UTC on 01 April 2026.

Multi-panel displays of GOES-19 imagery (below) revealed that reflectance and/or thermal signatures of the SLS rocket booster and its condensation plume were apparent in all 16 ABI spectral bands.

30-second GOES-19 images of all 16 ABI spectral bands, from 2234-2237 UTC on 01 April [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

A GOES-18 (GOES-West) Mesoscale Domain Sector was also positioned over the launch area — and in spite of a much of a much larger satellite viewing angle (69 degrees, vs. 36 degrees for GOES-19), reflectance and/or thermal signatures of the SLS rocket booster and its condensation plume were also seen in all 16 ABI spectral bands from GOES-18 (below).

1-minute GOES-18 images of all 16 ABI spectral bands, from 2234-2237 UTC on 01 April [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

A larger-scale view of 1-minute GOES-18 Water Vapor imagery (below) tracked the thermal signature of the SLS Core Stage booster exhaust as it approached the eastern limb of the satellite view at 2341 UTC.

1-minute GOES-18 Upper-level Water Vapor (top), Mid-level Water Vapor (center) and Low-level Water Vapor (bottom) images, from 2234-2241 UTC on 01 April [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

30-second GOES-19 True Color RGB images (below) showed the SLS rocket booster’s condensation cloud as it initially arched northeast away from the Florida coast — but wind shear soon began to deform that cloud feature.

30-second GOES-19 True Color RGB images, from 2234-2248 UTC on 01 April [click to play animated GIF]

Plots of rawinsonde data from Jacksonville, Florida (below) showed the wind shear that was present along the east coast of Florida on the day of the launch.

Plots of rawinsonde data from Jacksonville, Florida at 1200 UTC on 01 April and 0000 UTC on 02 April [click to enlarge]

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