Earth

A Look at Post-Blizzard Snowfall and Winds

By Keith Cowing
Press Release
January 25, 2016
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A Look at Post-Blizzard Snowfall and Winds
Aqua satellite on Jan. 24 at 1830 UTC
NASA

NASA satellites obtained a number of different views of the great winter storm that left many snowfall records from Virginia to New York City from January 22 to 24, 2016.
RapidScat provided a look at the strong winds that led to flooding in southern New Jersey, while NASA’s Aqua satellite and NASA/USGS’s Landsat satellite provided images of the post-storm snowy blanket.

The RapidScat instrument flies aboard the International Space Station and measures surface winds over the ocean. On Jan. 23 at 5 a.m. EST, RapidScat showed sustained winds as strong as 45 meters per second (51.7 mph/83.3 kph) along the coast of southern New Jersey, which included areas from Cape May to Atlantic City. Those winds led to flooding along coastal areas.

Some areas along the New Jersey coastline were flooded as winds pushed the ocean waters inland, and serious beach erosion was reported. Philadelphia’s NBC Channel 10 interviewed the mayor of North Wildwood, New Jersey who said the flooding on the morning of Saturday, January 23 was half a foot higher than what the town experienced during Superstorm Sandy in 2012.

RapidScat is an important tool for meteorologists, because maximum sustained winds are not always equally distributed in a storm. RapidScat shows forecasters the location of the strongest winds in different quadrants of a storm, indicating locations facing greatest impacts.

https://media2.spaceref.com/news/2016/image2-storm-rapidscat-1231.jpg

On Jan. 23 at 5 a.m. EST, RapidScat showed sustained winds as strong as 45 meters per second (51.7 mph/83.3 kph) along the coast of southern New Jersey, which included areas from Cape May to Atlantic City. Credits: NASA JPL, Doug Tyler

After the storm had moved off into the Atlantic Ocean, NASA’s Aqua satellite passed over the eastern U.S. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument aboard captured a visible-light image on Jan. 24 at 1830 UTC (1:30 p.m. EST) that showed a blanket of snow on the ground stretching from southeastern Massachusetts to southeastern Missouri.

The Operational Land Imager (OLI) on Landsat 8 captured a natural-color image of Virginia, Maryland, and Washington, D.C. on January 24, 2016. Most neighborhoods in the image received at least 18 to 24 inches (46 to 61 centimeters) of snowfall from the nor’easter that pounded the region from January 22 to 24.

SpaceRef co-founder, Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA, Away Teams, Journalist, Space & Astrobiology, Lapsed climber.