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Using Polar2Grid to display NUCAPS Lapse Rates

This short tutorial will explain how Polar2Grid can show individual isobaric levels, and also lapse rates (dT/dp) between two isobaric levels. Polar2Grid is CSPP software designed to process files either from the NOAA NODD (EDR files for NOAA-20 are here; EDR files for NOAA-21 are here) or from Direct Broadcast antenna... Read More

This short tutorial will explain how Polar2Grid can show individual isobaric levels, and also lapse rates (dT/dp) between two isobaric levels.

Polar2Grid is CSPP software designed to process files either from the NOAA NODD (EDR files for NOAA-20 are here; EDR files for NOAA-21 are here) or from Direct Broadcast antenna data streams. Polar2grid creates reprojected imagery. In this example, I decided to work with data over the western United States. The NOAA-20 orbits on 18 December (here, from this website), show a descending pass over the Rockies, from the USA-Canada border at 0938 UTC to Los Angeles at about 0943 UTC. The data for this were downloaded from the AWS Cloud for NOAA-20, and a list of the files is shown below. Times for the granules listed start at 09:37:22.9 and end at 09:43:44.7.

(base) [scottl@machine NUCAPSData]$ ls -1
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180937229_e202412180937527_c202412181021100.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180937549_e202412180938247_c202412181022030.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180938269_e202412180938567_c202412181021170.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180938589_e202412180939287_c202412181022310.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180939309_e202412180940007_c202412181021180.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180940029_e202412180940327_c202412181021580.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180940349_e202412180941047_c202412181023480.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180941069_e202412180941367_c202412181023040.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180941389_e202412180942087_c202412181023430.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180942109_e202412180942407_c202412181023470.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180942429_e202412180943127_c202412181023120.nc
NUCAPS-EDR_v3r2_j01_s202412180943149_e202412180943447_c202412181023480.nc
(base) [scottl@machine NUCAPSData]$ 

The variables that can be displayed using polar2grid and those files is quite long. If you were to download the files, and run the following command: ./polar2grid.sh -r nucaps -w geotiff --list-products-all -f /path_to_files/NUCAPS*.nc , you would see the many possibilities. For this blog post, I’m choosing Temperature_802mb and Temperature_596mb.

By default, polar2grid will rescale the plotted temperatures based on the range it finds. I want to have the same scale used for both levels here, and to do that, I have to tell polar2grid. This is done by adding a cris.yaml file into the directory polar2grid_v_3_1/etc/polar2grid/enhancements/, which directory is created as part of the polar2grid install process. The contents of the cris.yaml file that I created are below. I’ve mandated that both 802-mb temperatures and 596-mb temperatures be scaled from 240 to 300 K.

Contents of the cris.yaml file in the enhancements directory

I also want to display these data on a map of my choosing (rather than the native NOAA-20 orbital map). Polar2grid allows a user to define a map with the p2g_grid_helper.sh shell script below; the script expects a grid name (CANucaps), a center longitude and latitude (115 W, 35 N), grid spacings in m (4000/-4000) and grid sizes (960×720). The output here is put into a yaml file.

./p2g_grid_helper.sh CANucaps -115.0 35.0 4000 -4000 960 720 > CANucaps.yaml

Next, I call polar2grid to make imagery, color-enhance it, and add coastlines and a colorbar, shown below.

../polar2grid.sh -r nucaps -w geotiff -p Temperature_802mb Temperature_596mb -g CANucaps --grid-configs ./CANucaps.yaml -f /path_to_NUCAPSData/*
./add_colormap.sh ../../colormaps/p2g_sst_palette.txt j01_atms-cris_Temperature_802mb_20241218_093722_CANucaps.tif
./add_colormap.sh ../../colormaps/p2g_sst_palette.txt j01_atms-cris_Temperature_596mb_20241218_093722_CANucaps.tif
./add_coastlines.sh --add-coastlines --add-colorbar --colorbar-text-size 16 j01_atms-cris_Temperature_802mb_20241218_093722_CANucaps.tif
./add_coastlines.sh --add-coastlines --add-colorbar --colorbar-text-size 16 j01_atms-cris_Temperature_596mb_20241218_093722_CANucaps.tif

The resultant imagery is shown in a toggle below. I didn’t label the imagery, but I hope you can tell which field is 802mb, and which is 596mb! The colorbar automatically scales to the values specified in the cris.yaml file.

NOAA-20 Estimates of Temperature at 802 mb and 596 mb, 0937 UTC on 18 December 2024 (Click to enlarge)

Next, I decided I wanted to compute and plot the temperature difference between 802 and 596 mb. That requires additions to two files within the polar2grid distribution. A cris.yaml file is needed in (polar2grid_v_3_1/etc/polar2grid/composites/), with contents as shown below. I defined the parameter (lapse802_596) as using the DifferenceCompositor that requires two fields. Then, in the enhancements directory (polar2grid_v_3_1/etc/polar2grid/enhancements/) I scaled the field to be between 4 and 25K.

Contents of the cris.yaml file in the composites directory
lapse802_596 defined in the generic.yaml file within the enhancements directory

If I ran polar2grid now, and pointed to the NUCAPS data directory, and asked it to –list-products-all — I would see a new possibility! lapse802_596. The three polar2grid calls below,

./polar2grid.sh -r nucaps -w geotiff -p lapse802_596 -g CANucaps –grid-config ./CANucaps.yaml -f /path_to_NUCAPSData/*

./add_colormap.sh ../../colormaps/p2g_sst_palette.txt j01_atms-cris_lapse802_596_20241218_093722_CANucaps.tif

./add_coastlines.sh –add-coastlines –add-colorbar –colorbar-text-size 16 j01_atms-cris_lapse802_596_20241218_093722_CANucaps.tif

The result of those three calls is shown below. The steepest lapse rates are off the coast of California and in northwestern Mexico.

NUCAPS Lapse Rates, 802-596 mb, 0937 UTC on 18 December 2024 (Click to enlarge)

Thanks to Dave Hoese, CIMSS, for helping me figure this out!

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Subtropical Storm Biguá near the coast of Brazil

10-minute Full Disk scan GOES-16 (GOES-East) daytime True Color RGB + Nighttime Microphysics RGB images from the CSPP GeoSphere site (above) depicted the cyclonic (clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere) circulation associated with the formation of Subtropical Storm Biguá just off the coast of Rio Grande do Sul state in far southern Brazil during... Read More

GOES-16 daytime True Color RGB + Nighttime Microphysics RGB images, from 1200 UTC on 14th December to 1200 UTC on 16th December [click to play MP4 animation]

10-minute Full Disk scan GOES-16 (GOES-East) daytime True Color RGB + Nighttime Microphysics RGB images from the CSPP GeoSphere site (above) depicted the cyclonic (clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere) circulation associated with the formation of Subtropical Storm Biguá just off the coast of Rio Grande do Sul state in far southern Brazil during the 14th-16th December 2024 period.

12-hourly surface analyses shown below (source) indicated that this subtropical storm developed as an area of low pressure (denoted by a red “B”) moved southeast across Rio Grande do Sul on 14th December, becoming classified as Subtropical Storm (“Tempestade Subtropical”) Biguá shortly after it moved offshore at 0000 UTC on 15th December. 24 hours later, Biguá was downgraded to a Subtropical Depression (“Depressao Subtropical”) at 0000 UTC on 16th December.

Surface analyses from 0000 UTC on 14th December to 0000 UTC on 17th December [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

A sequence of ASCAT surface scatterometer winds (source) from Metop-B and Metop-C (below) showed that the compact low-level circulation center of Subtropical Storm Biguá remained just off the Brazilian coast on 15th December. The strongest winds were generally within the southern semicircle of the storm.

ASCAT winds from Metop-B and Metop-C on 15th December

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Here GOES the 2024 Review

A selection of several GOES ABI loops during 2022 and 2023 showcased the diverse range of features observed, which included volcanic ash plumes, hurricanes, convection, fog, smoke, fires, dust and ice. It’s very hard to choose just one event from every month of the year, but the goal here is to show a variety of phenomena and locations that... Read More

A selection of several GOES ABI loops during 2022 and 2023 showcased the diverse range of features observed, which included volcanic ash plumes, hurricanes, convection, fog, smoke, fires, dust and ice.

It’s very hard to choose just one event from every month of the year, but the goal here is to show a variety of phenomena and locations that NOAA‘s GOES ABI routinely monitors, in this case during 2024. Most loops generated are from the University of Wisconsin-Madison CIMSS Satellite Blog, which is linked to in the titles at the top of each monthly entry. Imagery from GOES-16 and -18 (and -19) are showcased, along with the ABI’s sectors: Full Disk (10-min intervals), Contiguous U.S. (5-min intervals) and Mesoscale sectors (30-sec to 1-min intervals).

January Single-banded snow squall along the length of Lake Michigan

GOES-16 ABI Day Cloud Phase Distinction RGB, 1401-2202 UTC on 19 January 2024 (Click to Play)

The mesovortices were also well forecast and observed by radar.

February The Smokehouse Creek Fire

GOES-16 Fire Temperature RGB over north Texas. Click to Play.

GOES-16 Fire Temperature RGB over north Texas 15:06 UTC 27 February 2024 – 03:31 UTC 28 February 2024 as shown in AWIPS

The above animation (and as an animated gif).

March SpaceX Starship Test Flight 3

1-minute GOES-16 images of ABI spectral bands 01-16 and a Rocket Plume RGB, from 13:24-13:29 UTC on 14 March (Click to Play).

Note that each of the ABI spectral bands could see a signal of the SpaceX rocket launch.

Bonus material: A SUVI Animation when the Sun was being eclipsed.

SUVI animation as the moon moves between the satellite and the Sun. (Click to Play)

The sun eclipsed by the moon as seen in a mp4 animation. Near realtime SUVI images: SSEC and SWPC.

April Time Composite Imagery of the Total Solar Eclipse

The Moon’s shadow during the total solar eclipse was observed by many ABI spectral bands.

Time composited (minimum value) ABI band 3 imagery (every 10 min) from 2017, 2024 and both.

Bonus material: 1-min Mesoscale Sector (with 5-min CONUS sectors) of an enhanced ABI band 3 (0.86 um) following the shadow:

GOES-16 ABI Band 3 enhanced to highlight the eclipse shadow. These are 1-minute Mesoscale sectors over the 5-minute CONUS sectors, tracking the shadow every minute as it moves across North America. (Animation from M. Gunshor, UW/CIMSS).

May Hail swath across the Texas Panhandle

GOES-16 (GOES-East) Nighttime Microphysics RGB images showed a thunderstorm that moved southeast from the New Mexico / Texas border across the southern Texas Panhandle Plains on 29 May 2024. A narrow northwest-to-southeast oriented hail swath produced by this storm  — from south of Clovis, New Mexico to south of Lubbock, Texas — showed up as pale shades of beige. The Land Surface Temperature derived product showed cooling in the hail swath of more than 10F.

GOES-16 Nighttime Microphysics RGB images on May 29, 2024. (Click to play)

Bonus material: River valley fog in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa

Similar to the long forgotten fog in many river valleys in BAMS (1989) observed by GOES-7, GOES-16 showed narrow tendrils of river valley fog — along a portion of the Mississippi River and a few of its tributaries in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa. The derived fog and low stratus product also monitored the fog, while showing the need for improved spatial resolutions.

GOES-16 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images on May 5, 2024, without/with plots of 15-minute METAR surface reports. Click to Play.

June GOES-U Rocket Launch

The GOES-U rocket launch was monitored by both GOES-18 ABI (30-sec) and GOES-16 (1-min), these were research Mesoscale Sector requests. Note that not only was the launch and rocket separation seen, but also the booster rockets re-burn when returning to land at the Kennedy Space Center! GOES-U became GOES-19 after successfully reaching geostationary orbit.

30-second GOES-East imagery showing the thermal signature of the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket boosters as it launched GOES-U from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, June 25, 2024. (Click to Play.)
GOES-U Rocket launch and the booster re-entry (in white circle) as seen by GOES-16 ABI meso-sector scans on June 25, 2024. Click to Play.

Bonus material: Haboob in New Mexico

GOES-18 Meso (1-min) imagery, CIMSS true color during the day and the “dust” RGB during the night on June 19/20, 2024. Click to Play.

Double Bonus: SUVI (Solar) Imagery

The 6 bands of the SUVI, once per day, from May 16 to June 11, 2024. Click to Play.

July Hurricane Beryl in the central Caribbean as a Category 5 storm

The earliest Cat 5 Atlantic basin hurricane as seen with 1-min GOES-16 imagery.

GOES-16 Band 13 (Clean Window infrared, 10.35 µm) infrared imagery, 0844-1253 UTC 2 July 2024 (Click to play)

Bonus material: Mesovortices seen within the eye in the ABI high resolution visible band.

GOES-16 Band 2 (Red Visible, 0.64 µm) imagery, 10:49 -13:18 UTC 2 July 2024 (Click to play)

August Tornado in Buffalo New York

The storms associated with a weak tornado (at 16:49 UTC) in Buffalo New York were monitored by GOES. The Day Cloud Phase Distinction RGB is shown, demonstrating the glaciation of the clouds.

GOES-16 Mesoscale Sector Day Cloud Phase Distinction RGB, 14 -19 UTC on 5 August 2024 (Click to Play.)

BonusGravity waves in the Midwest.

GOES-16 Upper Level Water Vapor (Band 8, 6.19 µm) infrared imagery, 06:11-16:11 UTC on 5 August 2024 (Click to Play.)

September Early (Preliminary / Non-operational) GOES-19 Imagery

During September, GOES-19 ABI continued to collect imagery from it’s location at approximately 90W and the equator. The ABI has 2 visible, 4 near-IR (or near-visible) and 10 IR bands.

The 16 spectral bands of the (Preliminary/Non-operational) early GOES-19 ABI from September 27 to October 1, 2024. (Click to Play.)

BonusMesoscale imagery of Helene.

October Annular Eclipse Shadow in the Southern Hemisphere

On October 2, 2024 several of the geostationary imagers observed the Moon’s shadow in the Southern Hemisphere. An example from the ABI on GOES-19 is below. A CIMSS true color loop doesn’t create the artificial colors that can happen in Raleigh-corrected composite imagery.

GOES-19 (Preliminary, Non-operational) ABI Full Disk CIMSS true color animation from October 2, 2024. (Click to Play.)

November Prolonged eruptive period of Popocatépetl in Mexico

A prolonged eruptive period of Popocatépetl occurred during 22 October – 4 November 2024. Ash RGB images showed the periodic pulses of ash from Popocatépetl.

GOES-19 ABI (Preliminary, Non-operational) “ash” RGB from October 22 to November 4, 2024. (Click to Play.)

A number of derived products, such as a radiometrically-retrieved Ash Height product from the NOAA/CIMSS Volcanic Cloud Monitoring site showed that the volcanic plume occasionally reached altitudes of 12 km or greater.

Bonus – Power Plant Plume Produces Precipitation

GOES-19 (Preliminary, non-operational) cloud phase distinction over western WI on November 28, 2024. (Click to Play.)

According to Scott Bachmeier, CIMSS “The Nighttime Microphysics RGB did a good job of highlighting the industrial plume — then after sunrise, True Color RGB imagery showed that the plume had seeded the cloud layer enough to cause it to dissipate as it produced the snowfall (sort of like the aircraft-induced “fall streak” effect).”

December Combined GOES West and East IR images

While the animation below does not start in the month of December, it does end in that month. This is a combined GOES-West and East ABI band 13 composite image, in a Mollweide projection. This loop shows hourly data, as does this near realtime web page.

GOES-18/16 ABI longwave window composite imagery, starting on June 1, 2024. (Click to Play.)

Similar animations as above, from June 1 to December 13, but with playback durations of 1 and 2 minutes. The location of 7-day (hourly) animations for a few of the ABI bands.

BonusBlowing Snow RGB from GOES-19 ABI (by Bill Line) — CIMSS Satellite Blog post on Blowing Snow

Double BonusSevere weather across the Bay Area of California

H/T

Thanks to all who make the GOES imagery possible, the ingest and software to display the imagery (including, but not limited to McIDAS-X, geo2grid, geosphere, Real Earth and AWIPS) and all who generated CIMSS Satellite Blog entries, especially Scott Lindstrom and Scott Bachmeier. Special thanks to Mat Gunshor and Jim Nelson of the UW/CIMSS AWG Imagery Team. T. Schmit works for NOAA/NESDIS/STAR, is stationed in Madison WI, and will be retiring from federal service at the end of 2024.

A similar ‘Year in Review’ for 2021; 2022 by NOAA Satellites.

Also, some “top 25” GOES-16 and GOES-17 ABI loops. Also see the Satellite Liaison Blog.

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Cyclone Chido makes landfall in Mozambique

EUMETSAT Meteosat-9 Infrared Window (10.8 µm) images (above) showed Category 4 Cyclone Chido as its eye moved across the small island of Mayotte (airport identifier FMCZ) in the Mozambique Channel around 0730 UTC on 14th December 2024 — and went on to make landfall just south of Penba, Mozambique (airport identifier... Read More

EUMETSAT Meteosat-9 Infrared Window (10.8 µm) images, from 1800 UTC on 13th December to 0700 UTC on 15th December [click to play animated GIF | MP4]

EUMETSAT Meteosat-9 Infrared Window (10.8 µm) images (above) showed Category 4 Cyclone Chido as its eye moved across the small island of Mayotte (airport identifier FMCZ) in the Mozambique Channel around 0730 UTC on 14th December 2024 — and went on to make landfall just south of Penba, Mozambique (airport identifier MQPB) around 0400 UTC on 15th December. Chido traversed increasingly warmer sea surface temperatures (source) as it approached Mozambique.

As Cyclone Chido passed over Mayotte, the airport reported wind gusts of 92 kts (106 mph) as the eye approached and 91 kts (105 mph) as the eye departed (below).

Time series plot of surface report data from Dzaoudzi–Pamandzi International Airport on the island of Mayotte [click to enlarge]

Shortly before Chido made landfall in Mozambique, a Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) image at 0253 UTC (below) indicated that a derived maximum wind speed of 123.84 knots was present in the SE quadrant of the eyewall (source).

RCM-1 SAR image at 0253 UTC on 15th December [click to enlarge]

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