One of my favorite things to watch are upper-level +PV anomalies moving offshore the east coast & sparking surface cyclogenesis.
We had a classic example last night, where a pre-existing baroclinic zone (thanks to the Gulf Stream) rapidly evolved into a striking occluded low. pic.twitter.com/74ylYWj5z8
— Philippe Papin (@pppapin) February 4, 2019
The approach of an upper-tropospheric Potential Vorticity (PV) anomaly induced rapid cyclogenesis just off the US East Coast on 04 February 2019, with the surface low rapidly occluding (surface analyses). The eastward-propagating PV Anomaly was apparent on GOES-16 (GOES-East) Air Mass RGB images from the AOS site (below) as darker shades of orange — transitioning to darker shades of red as the tropopause descended to lower altitudes bringing more ozone-rich air from the stratosphere into the atmospheric column.
Infrared Window images from Terra MODIS (11.0 µm) and NOAA-20/Suomi NPP VIIRS (11.45 µm), with plots of fixed buoy reports [click to enlarge]
Visible images from Terra MODIS (0.65 µm) and NOAA-20/Suomi NPP VIIRS (0.64 µm), with plots of fixed buoy reports [click to enlarge]
===== 05 February Update =====
After the primary center of circulation began to weaken, a pair of residual lower-tropospheric vortices (surface analyses) was seen to persist on GOES-16 “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images (above), rotating around each other in a binary interaction known as the Fujiwhara effect. The two vortices were also evident in NOAA-20 VIIRS Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) and Infrared Window (11.45 µm) images at 0620 UTC (below) — in spite of the lack of illumination from a New Moon, airglow alone was sufficient to provide an impressive “visible image at night” with the Day/Night Band. (note: the NOAA-20 VIIRS images are incorrectly labeled as Suomi NPP)
NOAA-20 VIIRS Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) and Infrared Window (11.45 µm) images at 0620 UTC [click to enlarge]
GOES-16 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images [click to play animation | MP4]
MIMIC Total Precipitable Water product [click to play animation | MP4]
from CIMSS Satellite Blog http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/blog/archives/31651
![GOES-16 Air Mass RGB images [click to play MP4 animation]](https://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/blog/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/20190204120214_conus.jpg)
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