Friday, November 5, 2010

Hawaiian Islands Satellite Interpretation Message

Hawaiian Islands Satellite Interpretation Message
Fri, 05 Nov 2010 07:30:00 -0500

Based on data through 1200 UTC November 05 2010.

The southern edge of the weak, tail end of a frontal cloud band stretched from 23°N 140°W to 21°N 148°W early this Friday morning. The northern edge of the remnant cloud band extended from 25°N 140°W to 23°N 148°W. The remnant cloud band was stationary.

Broken to overcast low clouds made up the cloud band. But the diffuse band blended in with a large field of broken to overcast low clouds to its west and north. This field of low cloudiness was mainly northeast of a line from 20°N 152°W to 28°N 167°W.

Broken to scattered, showery cumulus clouds were common in the vicinity of the Hawaiian islands. Near the islands, these low clouds were moving west-southwest at just over 20 miles an hour.

A low cloud plume was flowing westward off the Kona coast of the Big Island. This showery, broken to overcast plume was about 50 miles wide and extended over 450 miles from the Big Island.

Hawaii Infrared Satellite image for 1200 UTC
Central Pacific Infrared Satellite image for 1200 UTC


To change your subscriptions or preferences or stop subscriptions anytime, log in to your User Profile with your e-mail address. For questions or problems with the service, contact support@govdelivery.com.

This service is provided by NOAA’s National Weather Service.

Bookmark and Share

GovDelivery, Inc. (800-439-1420) sending on behalf of NOAA's National Weather Service · 1325 East West Highway · Silver Spring, MD 20910

No comments:

Post a Comment