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Interesting Cloud Formations Near and Over Oahu, Hawaii

Edit: NWS Honolulu Science and Operations Officer (SOO) Robert Ballard graciously provided some insight into this case, and this post has been updated with his input. Thanks, Bob!In the morning hours of 8 May 2026, some interesting low level cloud plumes appeared over or near the Hawaiian island of Oahu.... Read More

Edit: NWS Honolulu Science and Operations Officer (SOO) Robert Ballard graciously provided some insight into this case, and this post has been updated with his input. Thanks, Bob!

In the morning hours of 8 May 2026, some interesting low level cloud plumes appeared over or near the Hawaiian island of Oahu. The presence and cause of these clouds sparked some discussion around the Honolulu Forecast Office (who were gracious hosts of this blogger this past week) as it wasn’t immediately clear what was happening instance. Fortunately, satellites can provide some clues as to what was going on. This was mostly an overnight event, so we’ll start with the GOES-18 (GOES West) Band 13 (10.3 micron) loop. Here we see cloud blooming over the central Hawaiian island of Oahu as well as to the northeast and southwest. The leading edge of these clouds also exhibits noticeable clearing as the clouds propagate outward.

Band 13 IR imagery loop over Oahu and other parts of Hawaii.

So what’s going on here? Let’s see how satellites might provide some insight. Our first clue is that this is a fairly warm set of clouds. The contrast in the above loop isn’t great using the default color settings in AWIPS. Switching color maps and changing the limits brings out some more detail. Here’s a static image with a data readout. Our suspicions appear to be correct: the cloud at its coldest was still above freezing. The royal blue parts of the image that represent the expanding cloud shield are around 5-7 C, while the green areas represent the ocean surface and are around 19-20 C.

Enhanced infrared view of clouds over Oahu.

Next, let’s take a look at the Night Microphysics RGB product. According to the RGB Quick Guide, these pink and purple colors are associated with cloud-free regions. Obviously, that’s not happening here. However, the standard interpretations of these products were crested with the midlatitudes in mind, and in regions further afield the standard interpretations may not apply due to very different environmental temperatures and water vapor concentrations.

Loop of Night Microphysics RGB product.

Perhaps a look at the 12 Z radiosonde launch from Lihue may help. Lihue is on the very eastern edge of the island of Kaua’i, the island on the left side of the loop above. It’s around 100 miles from Honolulu (on the bay of the island at the enter of the image) and thus reasonably representative of the environment. Shown below, it’s a fairly typical sounding for Hawaii this time of year, with a prominent trade wind inversion between 650 and 800 hPa caused by the large-scale subsidence found at the boundary between the tropics and sub-tropics. Below that is a nearly-saturated and well-mixed boundary layer. Looking at the raw data, we can see that the inversion started around 780 hPa (2250 m) with the freezing level around 570 hPa (4850 m).

Adding in the surface observations from Honolulu brings some additional insight. The observations show the base of the cloud deck was 7500 feet (2300 m) which means that in essence the base of the clouds was at the base of the inversion. Contemporaneous radar-derived rain accumulation indicate that precipitation remained on the northeast side of the island, and no rain was recorded at Honolulu. At the time the clouds initiated (around 10 PM local or 0800 UTC), the surface temperature at Honolulu was 76 F (24 C) with a dew point of 66 F (19 C). That temperature might be the key to all of this. Let’s zoom in on the bottom of that sounding. I’ve added the Honolulu temperature and dew point observations in red and green respectively, and approximated a parcel trace in blue.

Zoom-in view of the Lihue sounding with Honolulu conditions overlaid.

If we assume that the vertical profile at Lihue is reasonably representative of the conditions over Honolulu, then it could be possible that surface-based parcels would be positively buyoant. If we look at the start of the start of the cloud formation, it appears to form on the northeastern edge of Oahu, as marked in the figure below.

Winds on the north side of the island were weak and from the north at the time that the convection initiated around 10 PM local time. The last bit of the puzzle is the terrain. Oahu is dominated by two significant mountain ranges, the Wai’anae range in the west and the Ko’olau Range in the east, which are the remnants of shield volcanoes of geological ages past. Courtesy of Open Street Map, here is a topographical map of Oahu.

Terrain map of Oahu.

Note how the initial cloudiness seems to parallel the Ko’olau Range, and the observed rain did the same. NWS SOO Robert Ballard notes the following, lightly edited for context:

At 10 pm, if the background flow is light enough (usually something like 8 knots or less background flow), you’d expect to see offshore/downslope land breezes, rather than onshore/upslope sea breezes dominate.  From the Night Microphysics loop, the low level background flow in the low cloud field seems to be fairly light and from the east-southeast, which is a favorable flow pattern to pin showers to the windward side of the Ko’olau mountain range, especially if you have some sort of mid-to-upper support coming near or over the islands.  This type of overall pattern, when a little more favorable aloft, can produce impactful rainfall and even flash flooding.

We may finally have enough information to put everything together. It appears that upslope flow in a relatively warm and saturated environment was enough to initiate what would normally be deep, moist convection. However, the strong cap of the trade wind inversion was high enough to allow convection to initiate but low enough to limit it to the 600-700 hPa level. This meant the clouds stayed relatively warm, and since everything stayed below freezing there was no lightning. In essence, these were cumulonimbus anvils at 1/3 the height of normal.

A few other “anvils” can be seen in locations over the ocean. These aren’t as vigorous as the main anvil over Oahu, but then again, they didn’t have the benefit of terrain enhancement. Given how warm the surface was and how saturated the air was, it’s very possible that there was surface based localized convection that didn’t need orographic lift to inititate.

The final question is the clearing that we see around the edges of the anvils as they propagate outward. That is likely subsidence compensating for the vertical lift. As the updraft slams into the trade wind inversion and the anvil spreads out, there has to be sinking motion elsewhere to maintain mass continuity. That subsidence means warming and drying, creating a clear band around the anvils.

Now that we’ve got all of this context, scroll back up and look at the second image again. Because, after all, how often do you see an overshooting top below the freezing level?

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Eruption of Dukono in Indonesia

10-minute Full Disk scan JMA Himawari-9 True Color RGB and Ash RGB images created using Geo2Grid (above) showed the volcanic cloud resulting from an eruption of Dukono (on the Indonesian island of Halmahera), which began at 2241 UTC on 07 May 2026. Changes in wind direction/speed with height resulted in a... Read More

Himawari-9 True Color RGB images (left) and Ash RGB images (right), from 2210 UTC on 07 May to 0400 UTC on 08 May [click to play animated GIF]

10-minute Full Disk scan JMA Himawari-9 True Color RGB and Ash RGB images created using Geo2Grid (above) showed the volcanic cloud resulting from an eruption of Dukono (on the Indonesian island of Halmahera), which began at 2241 UTC on 07 May 2026. Changes in wind direction/speed with height resulted in a complex transport pattern of the volcanic cloud material.

Radiometrically retrieved products from the NOAA/CIMSS Volcanic Cloud Monitoring site (below) were useful to further characterize the Dukono eruption cloud.

Himawari-9 Ash Height derived product, from 2200 UTC on 07 May to 0600 UTC on 08 May [click to play MP4 animation]

Maximum ash heights (above) were in the 10-14 km range, while ash loading values (below) were quite high in some parts of the volcanic cloud.

Himawari-9 Ash Loading derived product, from 2200 UTC on 07 May to 0600 UTC on 08 May [click to play MP4 animation]

Ash effective radius values (below) were also quite high in some parts of the volcanic cloud.

Himawari-9 Ash Effective Radius derived product, from 2200 UTC on 07 May to 0600 UTC on 08 May [click to play MP4 animation]

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30-second GOES-19 Infrared imagery of severe thunderstorms in Mississippi and Alabama

Overlapping portions of 1-minute Mesoscale Domain Sectors provided GOES-19 (GOES-East) imagery at 30-second intervals — and Infrared images with plots of SPC Storm Reports (above) showed thunderstorms that produced tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds across parts of southern and central Mississippi and Alabama from the late afternoon into the early evening hours... Read More

30-second GOES-19 Infrared images with time-matched (+/- 3 minutes) plots oi SPC Storm Reports, from 2131 UTC on 06 May to 0212 UTC on 07 May [click to play animated GIF]

Overlapping portions of 1-minute Mesoscale Domain Sectors provided GOES-19 (GOES-East) imagery at 30-second intervals — and Infrared images with plots of SPC Storm Reports (above) showed thunderstorms that produced tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds across parts of southern and central Mississippi and Alabama from the late afternoon into the early evening hours on 06 May 2026. Pronounced enhanced-V storm-top signatures were exhibited by several of the severe thunderstorms — and the coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperature associated with pulses of overshooting tops was -80ºC (violet pixels embedded within brighter white areas). Multiple long-track tornadoes (one of which was EF3-rated) moved across southern Mississippi, and were responsible for widespread damage and several injuries.

1-minute GOES-19 Infrared images (below) included plots of NWS Warning polygons — which revealed a few Tornado Emergency (bold red) polygons in southwestern Mississippi (0000 UTC | 0010 UTC | 0056 UTC | 0105 UTC) along the path of the EF3 tornado.

1-minute GOES-19 Infrared images with plots of SPC Storm Reports and NWS Warning polygons, from 2116 UTC on 06 May to 0215 UTC on 07 May [click to play MP4 animation]

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1-minute imagery to monitor flash flooding potential across American Samoa

During a period when American Samoa had been under a Flash Flood Watch, the Weather Service Office at Pago Pago requested that a GOES-18 (GOES-West) Mesoscale Domain Sector be positioned over the region (due to their lack of radar, satellite imagery can be a critical tool for monitoring the development of deep convection).... Read More

1-minute GOES-18 Infrared (10.3 µm) images with an overlay of GLM Flash Points and the Total Precipitable Water derived product, from 2201 UTC on 04 May to 1300 UTC on 05 May [click to play MP4 animation]

During a period when American Samoa had been under a Flash Flood Watch, the Weather Service Office at Pago Pago requested that a GOES-18 (GOES-West) Mesoscale Domain Sector be positioned over the region (due to their lack of radar, satellite imagery can be a critical tool for monitoring the development of deep convection). 1-minute GOES-18 Infrared imagery with overlays of GLM Flash Points and the Total Precipitable Water (TPW) derived product (above) showed clusters of deep convection with intermittent lightning activity that moved across the main island of Tutuila (located just south of where the imagery is centered) as well as the smaller Manu’a Islands (~65 miles to the east) during a 15-hour period on 04-05 May 2026. At the Pago Pago METAR site on Tutuila, most of their calendar day 24-hour precipitation for 04 May (2.21 inches) occurred during the period shown in the GOES-18 animation above — and a Flash Flood Warning was issued at 0154 UTC on 05 May.

GOES-18 Infrared (10.3 µm) image at 0250 UTC on 05 May, with a cursor sample of the coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperature near the island of Tutuila [click to enlarge]

The coldest cloud-top infrared brightness temperature exhibited by storms in the vicinity of Tutuila was -78.14ºC (above) — which was at an altitude near the Most Unstable (MU) air parcel’s Equilibrium Level (EL), according to rawinsonde data from Pago Pago (below). That sounding also depicted an atmosphere which was very moist and unstable, with parameters that were favorable for the further development of deep convection. In addition, rain shower and thunderstorm activity was enhanced by the presence of a surface trough / stationary front in the vicinity of the Samoan Islands (05 May surface analyses: 0000 UTC | 0600 UTC | 1230 UTC).

Plot of rawinsonde data from Pago Pago, American Samoa at 0000 UTC on 05 May [click to enlarge]

It is noteworthy that according to the climatology of TPW for all 0000 UTC soundings at Pago Pago (below), the TPW value of 2.81 inches sampled at 0000 UTC on 05 May 2026 was significantly higher than the previous maximum value on record for that particular time/date (2.63 inches).

Plot of Total Precipitable Water climatology for all 0000 UTC soundings at Pago Pago, American Samoa [click to enlarge]

The MIMIC Total Precipitable Water product (below) showed the band of high moisture that was moving southeast across the Samoan Islands during this flash flooding event.

Hourly MIMIC Total Precipitable Water images, from 0000 UTC on 03 May to 1500 UTC on 05 July [click to play animated GIF]

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