GOES-16 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images [click to play animation | MP4]
1-minute
Mesoscale Domain Sector GOES-16
(GOES-East) “Red” Visible (
0.64 µm) images
(above) showed a cluster of deep convection just to the north of the center of a rapidly-intensifying low (
surface analyses) off the coast of North Carolina on
02 April 2019. In addition, convection was seen developing along the north-south cloud band marking the leading edge of the cold front.
There were several factors pointing to the development of a sting jet with this storm, as discussed here and here. GOES-16 Low-level (7.3 µm), Mid-level (6.9 µm) and Upper-level (6.2 µm) Water Vapor images (below) revealed distinct areas of warming/drying (darker shades of yellow to orange) that possibly highlighted rapidly-descending air associated with a sting jet (for example, on the 1946 UTC images).
GOES-16 Low-level (7.3 µm), Mid-level (6.9 µm) and Upper-level (6.2 µm) Water Vapor images [click to play animation | MP4]
After 23 UTC, GOES-16 “Clean” Infrared Window (
10.3 µm) images
(below) portrayed the formation of a large eye-like feature indicative of a warm seclusion.
GOES-16 “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm) images [click to play animation | MP4]
A comparison between 1-km resolution Terra MODIS Infrared Window (11.0 µm) imagery at 0237 UTC with an Aqua MODIS Sea Surface Temperature product at 1755 UTC on the following afternoon
(below) showed that the storm intensified and formed the large eye feature over the northern portion of the axis of warmest Gulf Stream water (where SST values were in the 70-76ºF range).
Terra MODIS Infrared Window (11.0 µm) image at 0237 UTC, along with the 1755 UTC Aqua MODIS Sea Surface Temperature product [click to enlarge]
With a nighttime overpass of the NOAA-20 satellite at 0651 UTC, the eye-like feature was apparent in VIIRS Infrared Window (11.45 µm) and Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) images
(below). Although the Moon was in the Waning Crescent phase (at only 8% of Full), that illumination with the aid of airglow was sufficient to provide a useful “visible image at night” using the Day/Night Band; a streak of bright pixels was due to intense lightning activity within a line of thunderstorms just ahead of the cold front.
Note: the NOAA-20 images are incorrectly labeled as Suomi NPP.
NOAA-20 VIIRS Infrared Window (11.45 µm) and Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) images, with an overlay of the 06 UTC surface analysis [click to enlarge]
from CIMSS Satellite Blog
http://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/goes/blog/archives/32710
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