Posted on 12/26/2014 7:16:28 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
Severe weather in the form of tornadoes is not something people expect on Christmas week but a storm system on Dec. 23 brought tornadoes to Mississippi, Georgia and Louisiana. As the storm moved, NASAs RapidScat captured data on winds while NOAAs GOES satellite tracked the movement of the system.
NASAs RapidScat instrument flies aboard the International Space Station and captured a look at some of the high winds from the storms that brought severe weather to the U.S. Gulf Coast on Dec. 23. In addition, an animation of images from NOAAs GOES-East satellite showed the movement of those storms and other weather systems from Canada to South America from Dec. 21 to 24.
RapidScat spotted high winds in the Gulf of Mexico while Mississippi was experiencing tornadoes late on Dec. 23. One image RapidScat captured was on Dec. 23 at 1800 UTC (12 p.m. CST) that showed winds as fast as 30 meters per second/67.1 mph/108 kph off the southeastern coast of Texas. As the storm system moved east, on Dec. 24 at 02:00 UTC (Dec. 23 at 8 p.m. CST) RapidScat clocked sustained surface winds of the same strength near south central Louisiana and east of Mobile Bay, Alabama.
In addition to RapidScat imagery, NASA created an animation of visible and infrared satellite data from NOAAs GOES-East satellite that showed the development and movement of the weather system that spawned tornadoes affecting the Gulf Coast of the U.S. on Dec. 23 and early Dec. 24.
To create the images and the video, NASA/NOAAs GOES Project takes the cloud data from NOAAs GOES-East satellite and overlays it on a true-color image of land and ocean created by data from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument that flies aboard NASAs Aqua and Terra satellites. Together, those data created the entire picture of the storm systems and show their movement.
Coupled with local weather observations, soundings, and computer models, data from satellites like NOAAs Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite or GOES-East (also known as GOES-13) gives forecasters information about developing weather situations. In real-time, the NOAAs GOES-East satellite data in animated form showed forecasters how the area of severe weather was developing and moving.
According to NOAAs National Weather Service (NWS), holiday travel on Dec. 24 includes widespread rain for the eastern U.S., snow and wind for the Great Lakes and more snow for the Great Basin and Rocky Mountains.
In the Short Range Public Discussion on Dec. 24, NWS noted: Severe weather will continue to be possible across portions of the Southeast with damaging winds as the primary threat; however tornadoes cannot be ruled out. Strong winds will also be possible from the Tennessee Valley into the Northeast.
NWS forecasts cited a broad area of steady rain is expected from Florida to New England, with the heaviest rainfall occurring south of the Virginia state line. The southeastern states can expect some strong to severe thunderstorms ahead of the cold front. On the western side of the developing surface low, rain is expected to change to snow from Illinois to northern Michigan, with several inches of snow accumulation a possibility. There will also be a fair amount of wind over this region as the low intensifies. Some higher-elevation snow showers are also possible for parts of the central and northern Appalachians after the cold front moves through.
In the western U.S., a Pacific storm system is expected to bring widespread snow showers from Washington State to the western High Plains on Thursday, Dec. 25 giving many in those areas a white Christmas. The greatest accumulations are expected for the higher mountain ranges of the central and northern Rockies.
NOAAs GOES-East satellite sits in a fixed orbit in space capturing visible and infrared imagery of weather over the eastern U.S. and Atlantic Ocean. The GOES-East satellite is operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. NASA/NOAAs GOES Project at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland created the animation of GOES-East satellite data that covered the period during the severe weather.
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For more information about current risks for severe weather, visit NOAAs Storm Prediction Center at: http://www.spc.noaa.gov.
fyi
“Severe weather in the form of tornadoes is not something people expect on Christmas week”
“Billy, what do you think you’ll get for Christmas?”
“I don’t know, Bobby. Maybe a bike or a video game or a tornado.”
Billy....he knew he was destined to be a weatherman.
How did this past fall’s big, bad hurricane season turn out?
Thousands of model humans were killed in the latest runs of NOAA’s atmospheric modeling algorithm.
A disproportionate number of model deaths were suffered by communities of models “of color.”
Model polling results were modeled extensively, with the result that a large majority of the model population blamed modeled GOP politicians for the model deaths.
Pretty colored pictures compared to what? Some years ago there was a tornado in SE Wisconsin on Jan 6th
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