Thunderstorms over the Chukchi Sea and Beaufort Sea north of Alaska
A sequence of Suomi-NPP VIIRS Infrared Window (11.45 µm) and Visible (0.64 µm) images (above) showed snapshots of thunderstorms over parts of the Chukchi Sea and the Beaufort Sea off the northern coast of Alaska on 12 July 2021. The coldest convective cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures were in the -30 to -40ºC range. Unusual aspects of these thunderstorms included their high latitude location over ice-covered waters — as far north as 75ºN latitude — and the large amount of cloud-to-surface lightning strikes that they produced.There were 6 lightning strikes in Alaska today, and 159 over the sea ice in the Beaufort Sea. #akwx @AlaskaWx pic.twitter.com/PL8i17gR3Z
— Brian Brettschneider (@Climatologist49) July 13, 2021
Update on thunderstorms rumbling across across the Chukchi & Beaufort Seas on July 12. All this is occurring over high concentration sea ice as unstable air from Siberia is pushed eastward by a deep storm center farther north. #akwx #Arctic #lightning @Climatologist49 pic.twitter.com/8Ef78IOJRF
— Rick Thoman (@AlaskaWx) July 13, 2021
These thunderstorms were not surface-based — instead, they were forced by an approaching cold front (surface analyses) which helped to release elevated instability within the 500-300 hPa layer (below). Rawinsonde data from Utqiagvik (PABR) were not available (due to ongoing equipment malfunction at that site) — but a NUCAPS profile near the southernmost cluster of convection around 15 UTC (below) showed the layer of instability aloft.