GOES-16 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) and “Clean” Infrared Window (10.35 µm) images [click to play animation | MP4]
1-minute
Mesoscale Domain Sector GOES-16
(GOES-East) “Red” Visible (
0.64 µm) and “Clean” Infrared Window (
10.35 µm) images
(above) showed two severe thunderstorms along the North Dakota / South Dakota border region, which exhibited Above-Anvil Cirrus Plumes (
reference |
VISIT training).
GOES-16 “Red” Visible (0.64 µm) images, with time-matched SPC Storm Reports plotted in red [click to play animation | MP4]
A longer animation of GOES-16 Visible images with plots of time-matched
SPC Storm Reports is shown above, with GOES-16 Infrared images shown below.
GOES-16 “Clean” Infrared Window (10.35 µm) images, with time-matched SPC Storm Reports plotted in cyan [click to play animation | MP4]
Pulsing overshooting tops were seen whose cloud-top infrared brightness temperatures were in the -70 to -78ºC range — according to a plot of 00 UTC
rawinsonde data from Aberdeen, South Dakota
(below), this represented a 1-2 km overshoot of the Most Unstable (MU) air parcel’s Equilibrium Level (EL).
Plot of 00 UTC rawinsonde data from Aberdeen, South Dakota [click to enlarge]
Several hours later, another thunderstorm that produced damaging winds in southwestern North Dakota exhibited a residual Above-Anvil Cirrus Plume in central North Dakota as the storm was dissipating, as seen in Suomi NPP VIIRS Infrared Window (11.45 µm) and Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) images at 0915 UTC
(below).
Suomi NPP VIIRS Infrared Window (11.45 µm) and Day/Night Band (0.7 µm) images [click to enlarge]
from CIMSS Satellite Blog
https://cimss.ssec.wisc.edu/satellite-blog/archives/37428
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