Tropical Storm Pali in the central Pacific
Tropical Storm Pali has formed in the central Pacific, in a region east-southeast of Kwajalein Atoll (which atoll is at 9 N, 168 E), just west of warm Sea Surface Temperature anomalies (Source) associated with the ongoing El Nino. For the Central Pacific basin, Pali set new records for being the earliest-forming tropical cyclone on record (21 UTC on 7 January), as well as the most Equatorward-forming (at 4.7º N). The Himawari animation, above, of the 6.2 µm Water Vapor imagery from 0000 UTC on 7 January through 1500 UTC 8 January 2016 (mp4 available here), shows impressive upper-level outflow from the region of convection surrounding the storm center. A longer animation of Himawari 10.4 µm Infrared imagery (from 0000 UTC 06 January to 0650 UTC on 8 January) is available here. The Composite Infrared Imagery from AWIPS II, below, shows the slow but steady organization of the storm. Infrared brightness temperatures are very cold, with temperatures occasionally colder than -95º C.![Composite Infrared Imagery (10.7 µm) 0600 UTC 6 January 2016 - 1500 UTC on 8 January 2016 [click to animate]](https://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/satellite-blog/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2016/01/CompositeIR_1500UTC_8January2016.png)
Composite Infrared Imagery (10.7 µm) 0600 UTC 6 January 2016 – 1500 UTC on 8 January 2016 [click to animate]
GOES-15 Infrared Imagery (10.7 µm) (left) and Himawari-8 Infrared (right) (10.35) at full GOES Resolution 0600 UTC 8 January 2016 – 1800 UTC 8 January 2016 [click to animate]
GOES-15 Infrared Imagery (10.7 µm) (left) and Himawari-8 Infrared (right) (10.35) at full Himawari-8 Resolution 0600 UTC 8 January 2016 – 0900 UTC 8 January 2016 [click to animate]