Turbulence near the axis of a strong subtropical jet stream
GOES-16 (GOES-East) Upper-level Water Vapor (6.2 µm) images that included plots of Derived Motion Winds along with Pilot Reports (PIREPs) of turbulence (above) showed that there was widespread turbulence in the general vicinity of the axis of an anomalously-strong subtropical jet stream moving across the US on 09 February 2024. Wind speeds along the axis of the subtropical jet were 180-190 knots, with embedded jet streak maxima around 200 knots (RAP40 model MaxWind isotachs at 1500 UTC). A Derived Motion Wind speed of 202 knots was sampled over SW Missouri at 1031 UTC.There were 4 pilot reports of Severe turbulence during the 14-hour period shown above: over Kentucky around 1026 UTC, over Virginia around 1500 UTC, over Oklahoma around 1700 UTC and over Illinois at 2144 UTC. According to GOES-16 Derived Motion Winds, speed shear was notable in the vicinity of those cases of Severe turbulence: 1501 UTC | 1701 UTC | 2146 UTC.
GOES-16 Upper-level Water Vapor images with contours of Moderate or Greater (MOG) Turbulence Probability within the 38-41 kft layer (below) depicted intermittent pockets of 33% (green) to 50% (yellow) probability along or near the axis of the subtropical jet — and the 2 high-altitude (41-43 kft) Severe turbulence PIREPs occurred in the general proximity of MOG Probability contours in the 33-50% range (1701 UTC | 2146 UTC).