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Image Interpretation for Weather Analysis Part 2 26 October 2010 Dr. Steve Decker Severe Thunderstorm Detection  Severe thunderstorms often have notable overshooting tops  Vis: Shadow effects  IR: “Enhanced-V” signature  Example: Vis IR Boundary Detection  Boundary: Subtle separation between two air masses  Region of enhanced lifting – Clouds – Thunderstorms  Best seen in Vis  Lake Breeze example Blowing Snow  Can produce whiteout conditions, even with no precipitation  Vis example Common Channels  Visible – 0.65 μm (red)  Infrared (IR) – 10.7 μm  Water Vapor – 6.7 μm  Shortwave IR – 3.9 μm Atmospheric Absorptivity Shortwave IR  An infrared window channel – Just like “longwave” IR  Also sees solar radiation (blackbody curve overlap)  Works best for warmer temps – > -30°C – Cold clouds (e.g., cirrus) look mottled – Good for fire detection  Fog detection  Supercooled vs. ice clouds  Snow vs. cloud Fire Detection with Shortwave IR  Fires show up as “hot spots”  SoCal fire example Fog Detection  Emissivity of liquid water cloud at 3.9 μm is less than at longer wavelengths. – Fog shows up as lower temperatures – Appears brighter  Opposite true for ice crystals (cirrus) Fog Detection  Emissivity of liquid water cloud at 3.9 μm is less than at longer wavelengths. – Fog shows up at lower temperatures – Appears brighter  Differences can be maximized by taking the difference between the longwave and shortwave IR images Supercooled Cloud Detection  Supercooled cloud droplets frequently occur for -20°C < T < 0°C  Detection method – Identify cloud-top temperatures conducive for supercooled droplets using longwave IR – Just like fog/stratus droplets, supercooled droplets emit less radiation in shortwave IR Supercooled Example http://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/sport/goes_imager/goes_imager.html Snow vs. Cloud  During the day, low clouds will reflect more solar radiation than snow at 3.9 μm, so low clouds appear darker (more signal) than snow. Urban Heat Islands  Shortwave IR is more sensitive to emissions from warmer temperatures – Urban heat islands show up better Water Vapor Channel  Not an IR window – Does not see the ground (Exception)  Absorbed/emitted by water vapor  Colder temperatures imply: – More moisture in the mid and upper troposphere – Possible regions of ascent  Temperature differences important; not their magnitudes  Example Identifying Jet Streams  Jet Streams – Ribbons of quickly moving air near the tropopause – Separate air masses – Support active weather  Vis: Band of cirrus clouds on equatorward side  Vapor: Strong moisture gradient – Dry air poleward – Moist air equatorward Locating Ridges and Troughs  Upper tropospheric flow often contains a ridge/trough pattern  Clouds often occur downstream of troughs, but upstream of ridges  If ridge has small amplitude, clouds may “spill over” ridge  Cloud band ahead of trough often indicates “warm conveyor belt” immediately ahead of a surface cold front – Southern extent of solid band marks trough axis Water Vapor Examples  Eddies  Cyclone development – Occlusion stage 1 2  Mountain waves – Java example  Current weather Many More Examples  CIMSS Satellite Blog