Rare December tornado in Washington
Preliminary Damage Results for Port Orchard Tornado have been released. Survey finds EF-2 #tornado damage from Tuesday December 18th. Details in graphic and at: https://t.co/fnaZxgYG6U #wawx #PortOrchardTornado pic.twitter.com/jxpsBgkmgC
— NWS Seattle (@NWSSeattle) December 19, 2018
* GOES-17 images shown here are preliminary and non-operational *
A rare December tornado occurred in Port Orchard, Washington on 18 December 2018. GOES-17 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images (above) and “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images (below) showed the thunderstorms that moved eastward across the area in the wake of the passage of an occluded front earlier in the day.
Due to the relatively large GOES-17 satellite viewing angle (or zenith angle) of 56.38 degrees, there was a modest amount of parallax error in terms of the actual location of cloud-top features associated with the tornado-producing storm. A toggle between GOES-17 Visible and Infrared images at 2147 UTC with SPC tornado reports plotted at their actual and “parallax-corrected” locations (assuming a mean storm-top height of 8 km) are shown below — note how the parallax-corrected tornado plot location more closely aligns with top the parent thunderstorm. A comparison of VIIRS Infrared Window (11.45 µm) images from Suomi NPP (Washington overpass time: 2042 UTC) and NOAA-20 (Washington overpass time: 2132 UTC) is shown below. The coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures on the VIIRS images were -42ºC (bright green enhancement), which corresponded to altitudes of 7-8 km on 00 UTC rawinsonde data from Quillayute, Washington (plot). A toggle between NOAA-20 VIIRS Infrared Window (11.45 µm) images at the local overpass times of 1952 UTC and 2132 UTC, viewed using RealEarth (below), provided a closer view of the convection.