Lesson 1
Meteorological Satellite Orbits
Lesson 2
Review of Radiative Transfer
Lesson 3
Visible Image Interpretation
Lesson 4
Infrared Image Interpretation
Lesson 5
Multispectral Image Interpretation
Lesson 6
Fires & Aerosols
Lesson 7
Winds
Lesson 8
Sounders
Lesson 9
Fog and Stratus
Lesson 10
Thunderstorm
Lesson 11
Winds
Lesson 12
Hurricanes
Lesson 13
Global Circulation
Lesson 14
Synoptic Scale
Lesson 15
Global Circulation
Lesson 16
Satellite Oceanography
Lesson 17
Precipitation

25 May 2001 -- GOES-8 Visible Channel

This loop of Rapid Scan Operations (RSO) GOES-8 visible channel imagery shows several interesting features over the Wisconsin and Lake Michigan region on 25 May 2001. A gravity wave train (apparently originating as a low-level convective outflow boundary over northern Lake Michigan) propagates southwestward across the lake, eventually reaching the lakeshore counties in central Wisconsin. The stratiform cloudiness that existed over Lake Michigan was dissipating in the wake of the gravity wave, but as the wave feature intersected the coastal portions of Manitowoc and Sheboygan counties in Wisconsin (outlined in yellow), fog and stratus was driven inland several miles. The air temperature at Manitowoc (identifier KMTW) dropped into the low to middle 40's F, and remained nearly 10 degrees cooler than surrounding locations due to the fog/stratus and onshore flow.

Inland, over southeastern Wisconsin, new convection can be seen to develop as a result of intersecting low-level convective outflow boundaries near the Wisconsin-Illinois border. Several cold air funnels were reported with the convection across southeastern Wisconsin.

Java applet developed by Tom Whittaker, CIMSS / SSEC



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