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5-minute PACUS/CONUS sector Upper-level Water Vapor (6.2 µm) images with an overlay of GLM-detected Flash Extent Density from GOES-18 (GOES-West) and GOES-16 (GOES-East) (above) showed the detection of a bolide — which according to the American Meteor Society occurred around 1333 UTC on 13 November 2024.Since the bright fireball occurred at a high altitude... Read More
Upper-level Water Vapor (6.2 µm) images with an overlay of GLM Flash Extent Density, from GOES-18 (left) and GOES-16 (right), 1326-1346 UTC on 13 November [click to play animated GIF | MP4]
5-minute PACUS/CONUS sector Upper-level Water Vapor (6.2 µm) images with an overlay of GLM-detected Flash Extent Density from GOES-18 (GOES-West) and GOES-16 (GOES-East)(above) showed the detection of a bolide — which according to the American Meteor Society occurred around 1333 UTC on 13 November 2024.
Since the bright fireball occurred at a high altitude (as a meteor was entering the Earth’s upper atmosphere), there was a notable parallax shift in the GLM-detected signatures (it should be noted that Level 3 GLM gridded products such as Flash Extent Density are not parallax-corrected) — with the apparent location over southwest Alberta as viewed from GOES-18, and over southeast British Columbia as viewed from GOES-16. With both satellites positioned over the Equator, a parallax-induced northward shift in apparent location would also need to be accounted for (GOES-18 parallax correction | GOES-16 parallax correction); this would bring the actual bolide location southward, to a point over far northwestern Montana (the blue fireball trajectory arrow pointing southeastward on the AMS map).
Satellite viewing angle also had a small effect on the GLM Flash Extent Density magnitude (1336 UTC image) — with a peak FED value of 6.0 observed by GOES-18, compared to 4.0 observed by GOES-16. Conversely, the peak Total Optical Energy values were 898.8 fJ observed by GOES-18 compared to 2241.7 fJ observed by GOES-16 (below).
Upper-level Water Vapor (6.2 µm) images with an overlay of GLM Total Optical Energy, from GOES-18 (left) and GOES-16 (right), at 1336 UTC on 13 November [click to enlarge]
Day Night Band imagery from the three JPSS Satellites — NOAA-21 (1515 UTC), Suomi NPP (1537 UTC) and NOAA-20 (1602 UTC) show Tropical Storm Man-Yi as it approached the southern Marianas Islands early in the morning on 13 November 2024 (Guam Time). These images were created using CSPP Software and data... Read More
Day Night Band imagery from the three JPSS Satellites — NOAA-21 (1515 UTC), Suomi NPP (1537 UTC) and NOAA-20 (1602 UTC) show Tropical Storm Man-Yi as it approached the southern Marianas Islands early in the morning on 13 November 2024 (Guam Time). These images were created using CSPP Software and data downloaded at the Direct Broadcast site on Guam. The Deep Convection with the system is close to the surface center. That was not the case 12 hours earlier!
Himiwari-9 visible imagery (Band 3, 0.64 µm), below (from this site), from 0300 – 0510 UTC on 12 November show a low-level swirl of clouds to the northwest of the deepest convection.
Shortwave infrared imagery from Himawari-9 (Band 7, 3.9 µm) shows the low-level circulation separate from the convection until about 1000 UTC. Shortly before that time, convection develops into and persists within the center of the low-level swirl of clouds.
As of 0000 UTC on 13 November, the deepest convection with Man-Yi is passing south of Guam. Winds at the Guam airport are easterly, with gusts to 40 mph. The statement below was issued at 841 AM/13 November Chamorro Standard Time (2241 UTC on 12 November).
Thanks to Douglas Schumacher, CIMSS, for the Day Night Band imagery from Guam.
GOES-16 (GOES-East) Red Visible images and the Land Surface Temperature derived product (above) showed a large area of relatively fresh snow cover across the Plains of eastern Colorado on 11 November 2024 — this deep snow cover was the result of a closed upper-level low which moved across the area 2-3 days... Read More
GOES-16 Red Visible images (0.64 µm, left) and Land Surface Temperature derived product (right), with/without an overlay of Surface Air Temperatures [click to play MP4 animation]
GOES-16 (GOES-East) Red Visible images and the Land Surface Temperature derived product (above) showed a large area of relatively fresh snow cover across the Plains of eastern Colorado on 11 November 2024 — this deep snow cover was the result of a closed upper-level low which moved across the area 2-3 days earlier, producing impressive accumulations. This significant snow cover was having a notable effect on surface air temperatures, keeping them anywhere from 10-20 F colder than adjacent areas of bare ground.
GOES-16 Red Visible image (0.64 µm, left) and Land Surface Temperature derived product (right) at 2001 UTC, with a cursor sample of the METAR surface report (red) and Land Surface Temperature (white) at Limon, Colorado (KLIC) [click to enlarge]
Over interior areas with deeper snow cover, cursor sampling of the Land Surface Temperature at Limon (above) and at La Junta (below) revealed values in the mid 30s F.
GOES-16 Red Visible (0.64 µm, left) image and Land Surface Temperature derived product (right) at 2001 UTC, with a cursor sample of the METAR surface report (red) and Land Surface Temperature (white) at La Junta, Colorado (KLHX) [click to enlarge]
At locations along or near the edge of the snow cover, their surface air temperature was somewhat cooler if winds were blowing off the snow pack. This effect was very apparent at Burlington (KITR) along the eastern edge of the snow cover, with cool NW winds keeping their air temperature in the upper 30s F (below).
GOES-16 Red Visible image (0.64 µm, left) and Land Surface Temperature derived product (right) at 2001 UTC, with METAR surface reports plotted in red [click to enlarge]
Total Precipitable Water fields over the western Pacific on 10/11 November 2024, above, show 4 tropical cyclones at different stages of development across the West Pacific. The screenshot from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, below, shows the 4 storms: Yinxing, about to make landfall in Vietnam, Toraji pulling away from... Read More
Total Precipitable Water fields over the western Pacific on 10/11 November 2024, above, show 4 tropical cyclones at different stages of development across the West Pacific. The screenshot from the Joint Typhoon Warning Center, below, shows the 4 storms: Yinxing, about to make landfall in Vietnam, Toraji pulling away from the northern Philippines, Tropical Storm 27W in between the Marianas and the Philippines, and Man-yi moving through the Marianas. This screenshot from the CIMSS Tropical Weather website similarly shows the 4 storms lined up in a row.
Himawari-9 imagery, below, shows the two easternmost tropical cyclones. Mid-level water vapor imagery shows dry(ish) mid-level air between the two systems; total precipitable water imagery from (say) 1200 UTC on 11 November also shows a filament of relatively dry air that might influence the development of Man-yi, the easternmost system, in the short term. Clean window infrared imagery shows strong convection intermittently over both systems.
The Joint Typhoon Warning Center suggests Man-Yi will move mostly west towards Guam, affecting the Marianas between 0000 and 1200 UTC on 13 November (this is late in the day on the 13th on Guam). As noted in this Facebook Live recording (from the Science and Observation Officer on Guam), the forecast path for Man-Yi has been evolving with time. Interests throughout the Marianas and Micronesia show pay attention to advisories on this storm, both from JTWC and from the National Weather Service on Guam.
On 10 November, GCOM-W1 overflew the developing system. Microwave information at 89 GHz is shown below with derived AMSR-2 surface wind speeds (imagery from Brandon Aydlett, SOO at NWS Guam); the imagery was produced by CSPP software operating on data downloaded at the Direct Broadcast antenna on Guam. Microwave data revealed a sheared system. A low-level swirl is centered near 16oN Latitude, 154oE Longitude, note the curved bands to the west and north (darker blue in the enhancement) and deep convection (yellow/red/brown in the enhancement) to the southeast of the low-level swirl. Derived wind speeds show values exceeding 40 knots underneath the strongest convection. (You can view AMSR-2 windspeed at the NASA Worldview site as well here)
A basin-wide Shear Analysis, below, from the CIMSS Tropical Weather Site (link), shows strong shear over the system at 1500 UTC on 10 November 2024. Man-Yi’s convection was between 150o and 160o E Longitude, and around 13o N Latitude, as highlighted by the dark arrow below. Strong shear that is diagnosed over the system would displace the convection to the southeast of the near-surface circulation as shown in the microwave imagery above.
By 1500 UTC on 11 November, the shear over the system has weakened as the system approached 150o E Longitude. Slow strengthening is forecast. The northern Marianas Islands are all under a Tropical Storm Watch.
Thanks to Brandon Aydlett, WFO GUM for the alert about this storm and for the imagery. Thanks also to Douglas Schumacher for the GCOM-W1 imagery. Note that there is more Guam-centered GCOM-W1 89 GHz imagery on 11 November in this blog post.