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Hurricane In Kansas??

  • Thread starter Thread starter Larry J. Kosch
  • Start date Start date
Sorry

Sorry... :oops: one word too many. I was using SWW as a short version of Severe Weather Watch. It was kinda dumb for me to refer to that acronym with a watch word attached. That's kinda like giving out a tornado warning warning. :lol:
 
Watch the clouds

You can watch the clouds as they develop on the Goes-12 VIS SAT. At times you will see a large fields of cumulus clouds develop. Then you may see an "edge" develop in the fields with clouds on one side and none on the other. That would be a boundary developing. Other times you can see an outflow boundary showing up as a line of small cumulus trailing the main storms. Those are places to watch for storm development.

Sometimes you will see a line or a mass of clouds coming up on the VIS SAT. If you check with NWS, there may be a MSC discussion about that particular area having severe thunderstorm potential. Then you pay particular attention to that area until the towers starts going up.

I found another VIS SAT web site that shows a good time loop. It shows the rate of development and the cloud movement:

http://weather.cod.edu/analysis/analysis.1kmvis.html

Just click on the state you are interested in and click on visible satellite animation.

Thanks for asking. 8)
 
Yep, thats one of the good things about visible satellite... You can see features that other sources cannot - (i.e. NEXRAD can't see the CU field developing, unless there is precip associated with it).
 
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