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The Himawari-9 Target sector monitored the evolution of Typhoon Mawar from its inception. The animation above (it re-centers occasionally) shows the initial intensification of the system, a brief but notable weakening just prior to moving close to Guam, and then reintensification to the west-northwest of the Marianas. The animation... Read More
HImawari-9 infrared (Band 13, 10.4 ) imagery, 20-26 May 2023
The Himawari-9 Target sector monitored the evolution of Typhoon Mawar from its inception. The animation above (it re-centers occasionally) shows the initial intensification of the system, a brief but notable weakening just prior to moving close to Guam, and then reintensification to the west-northwest of the Marianas. The animation below tracks the storm from near peak intensity to weakening to the northeast of the Philippines.
HImawari-9 infrared (Band 13, 10.4 ) imagery, 26-29 May 2023
Total Precipitable Water fields from MIMIC, below, suggest the weakening near Guam may have been influenced by dry air that wrapped into the system from the west and south.
MIMIC Total Precipitable Water, 0000 UTC 20 May through 2300 UTC 29 May 2023 (click to enlarge)
Suomi-NPP VIIRS Visible (0.64 µm) images over the 4-day period from 26-29 May 2023 (above) displayed the anomalously low ice concentration (source) within a portion of Canada’s Amundsen Gulf — along with the formation of multiple ice leads, followed by the separation of large areas of fast ice within the eastern third of the satellite... Read More
Suomi-NPP VIIRS Visible (0.64 µm) images, 26-29 May [click to play animated GIF | MP4]
Suomi-NPP VIIRS Visible (0.64 µm) images over the 4-day period from 26-29 May 2023 (above) displayed the anomalously low ice concentration (source) within a portion of Canada’s Amundsen Gulf — along with the formation of multiple ice leads, followed by the separation of large areas of fast ice within the eastern third of the satellite scene.
Much of this fast ice separation was the result of wind stress, shown by the easterly/northeasterly winds that prevailed during the period at Cape Perry CZCP — which included gusts in excess of 30 knots on 27 May as an anomalously deep low pressure moved eastward across the Northwest Territories into Nunavut (not surprisingly, the most significant areal extent of fast ice separation also occurred on 27 May).
A comparison of Suomi-NPP VIIRS Sea Ice Concentration, Sea Ice Thickness and Sea Ice Temperature derived products viewed using RealEarth(below) showed ice conditions on Day 1 of this 4-day period, before the stronger easterly winds on Day 2 led to more widespread development of ice leads and a separation of fast ice.
Suomi-NPP VIIRS Sea Ice Concentration (%), Sea Ice Thickness (m) and Sea Ice Temperature (K) derived products at 0000 UTC on 27 May [click to enlarge]
Probed values of those parameters over an area of fast ice that had not yet been fractured and separated (below) indicated a Sea Ice Thickness of 1.57 m, a Sea Ice Temperature of 269.14 K and a Sea Ice Concentration of 99% at that particular location.
Probed values of Sea Ice Concentration (%), Sea Ice Thickness (m) and Sea Ice Temperature (K) over an area of fast ice [click to enlarge]
2 people were hospitalized after being struck by lightning on a Colorado Springs golf course (media report) around 2140 UTC on 26 May 2023. 5-minute GOES-16 (GOES-East) “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images (above) showed thunderstorms that were increasing in coverage/intensity as they moved northeastward toward the Colorado Springs area (eventually producing 1.00-inch-diameter hail) — and Lightning Cast... Read More
GOES-16 “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images, with/without an overlay of GLM Flash Extent Density and contours of LightningCast Probability [click to play animated GIF| MP4]
2 people were hospitalized after being struck by lightning on a Colorado Springs golf course (media report) around 2140 UTC on 26 May 2023. 5-minute GOES-16 (GOES-East) “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images (above) showed thunderstorms that were increasing in coverage/intensity as they moved northeastward toward the Colorado Springs area (eventually producing 1.00-inch-diameter hail) — and Lightning Cast Probability values over Colorado Springs began to steadily increase after 1901 UTC, reaching or exceeding 50%/75%/90% at 2021 UTC/2046 UTC/2056 UTC respectively.
The occurrence of GLMFlash Extent Density pixels directly over Colorado Springs began at 2121 UTC — 25 minutes after the initial 90% LightningCast value, 35 minutes after the initial 75% LightningCast value and 60 minutes after the initial 50% LightningCast value. Decision support for outdoor events benefits from the lead time offered by the LightningCast tool.
The LightningCast webite (here) includes a ‘Lightning Meteogram’ tool for airports within the USA and Canada; the one for the Colorado Springs CO airport (KCOS) for this event is shown below for both GOES-16 CONUS data (left) and GOES-18 PACUS/Meso (right) — a GOES-18 Mesoscale sector was over Colorado during this event. LightningCast probabilities — that a GLM detection will occur within the next 60 minutes — were very large before the lightning near the airport, and tapered off before the lightning diminished.
ProbSevere LightningCast Probabilities for GOES-16 CONUS data scanning (upper left) and GOES-18 PACUS and Mesosector data (upper right); Lightning observations from ENI within 5 and 10 miles of airport KCOS (bottom left and right); and GLM Flash Count within 5 and 10 miles of KCOS from GOES-16 (lower left) and GOES-18 (lower right) (Click to enlarge)
A meteogram of surface observations at Pago Pago International Airport, above, shows a period of heavy rain and strong winds between 1400 and 2300 UTC on 26 May 2023. The strong winds had a big affect on waves at Aunu’u, as shown below (imagery from this website; click here to see the... Read More
Surface observations at NSTU (Pago Pago International Airport) from 2000 UTC 25 May through 23 UTC 27 May 2023 (Click to enlarge)
A meteogram of surface observations at Pago Pago International Airport, above, shows a period of heavy rain and strong winds between 1400 and 2300 UTC on 26 May 2023. The strong winds had a big affect on waves at Aunu’u, as shown below (imagery from this website; click here to see the location of that buoy). What kind of satellite products could help a forecaster anticipate this inclement weather?
Wave Height and principal wave direction on 26 May 2023 at Aunu’u to the east of Tutuila (Click to enlarge)GOES-18 Night Microphysics RGB, 1000-1950 UTC on 26 May 2023 (Click to enlarge)
GOES-18 Night Microphysics RGB imagery from 1000-1950 UTC on 26 May is shown above. It is a challenge to intuit any kind of low- or mid-level feature that might be triggering convection in this imagery because of the preponderance of high clouds (red in this RGB) (Note also that barcode noise artifacts do appear in this RGB and show up as vertical yellow streaks; here are GOES-18 PACUS images that show the noise on 26 May). The window channel imagery (Band 13, 10.3 µm) loaded with the Total Precipitable Water fields is shown below. GOES-18 TPW is a clear-sky only product, and therefore little information is present in the active band of precipitation — but it does show abundant moisture to the north of Samoa, with dryer air to the northeast and southwest. (AWIPS Note: I’ve changed the default TPW values here from 0-2.5″ to 1-2.5″ because values between 0 and 1″ in this part of the Globe are exceptionally rare!). Strong convection develops between Upolu and Tutuila around 1200 UTC and the moves eastward to cover Tutuila. (Click here to see a METAR listing from Pago Pago; heavy rain started at 1330 UTC). Also: there is a parallax shift in the imagery below. GOES-18 sits over the Equator at 137 o W, to the east of the imagery below that has the 170oW longitude line in its center; the true location of the cloud tops will be to the east of their displayed location, so they are developing closer to Tutuila than in the display.
GOES-18 Clean Window Infrared (Band 13, 10.3 µm) imagery, and Total Precipitable Water, 1000-1950 UTC on 26 May 2023 (Click to enlarge)
CIMSS creates LightningCast probabilities for the South Pacific surrounding American Samoa, available at this website (choose the ‘American Samoa’ sector). The animation below shows Probabilities of a GLM observation with the next 60 minutes (i.e., LightningCast Probability) increasing to the west of Tutuila starting around 1200 UTC and then persisting at high values around the island. One can use this product to anticipate not only lightning, but also the strong convection that produces lightning.
ProbSevere LightningCast Probabilities displayed with GOES-18 Clean Window infrared imagery, 1000-1400 UTC on 26 May 2023 (Click to enlarge)MIMIC Total Precipitable Water (TPW), 0000-1500 UTC on 26 May 2023 (Click to enlarge)
As noted above, GOES-18 Level 2 TPW fields provided scant information for this event because of abundant clouds. MIMIC TPW, in contrast (shown above), derived from microwave data that is then redistributed with pressure-weighted GFS winds, shows an atmosphere rich in moisture across the Samoan island chain, with largest values of TPW moving over the island chain towards the end of this animation. The upper-air Soundings at Pago Pago, below, from 0000 and 1200 UTC on 26 May (from this site) shows an increase in TPW during those 12 hours as well, from 58 to 62 mm. That is near the maximum observed value for 26 May at this site (source).
SkewT-logP Rawinsonde, Pago Pago, 0000 and 1200 UTC on 26 May 2023 (click to enlarge)
What kind of wind observations could be used to anticipate the strong winds?
GCOM-w1 AMSR-2 Wind Speeds, 25 and 26 May 2023 (Click to enlarge)
Microwave estimates of wind from the AMSR-2 instrument on GCOM-W1, above, show the development of strong winds just to the south of the Samoan island chain by the time of the descending pass on 26 May. A similar increase is apparent in the ASCAT winds, below, from MetopB! The peak winds have increased, and the areal extent of the strong winds has definitely expanded!
MetopB ASCAT winds at ca. 2100 UTC on 25 May and ca. 0900 UTC on 26 May 2023 (Click to enlarge)