Eruption of Popocatépetl in Mexico
GOES-16 (GOES-East) Split Window Difference (10.3-12.3 µm) along with SO2 RGB and Ash RGB images (above) displayed signatures of volcanic clouds produced by a sequence of eruptions of Popocatépetl in Mexico on 21 February 2024. Although these volcanic clouds apppeared to be predominantly ash-dominated (shades of pink to magenta in the Ash RGB, and shades of blue in the SO2 RGB), there were brief indications of an SO2-ash mixture — in a toggle between the 2 RGB image types at 1846 UTC (below), note the shades of green near the volcano summit (suggestive of SO2 dominance) and shades of orange in the Ash RGB with shades of pink to red in the SO2 RGB (suggestive of an ash/SO2 mixture) a few miles downwind of the summit.
GOES-16 Nighttime Microphysics RGB + daytime True Color RGB images (below) showed the west-southwest transport of the volcanic cloud (shades of pink to magenta) during the nighttime hours into the next morning, followed by additional volcanic cloud pulses that moved to the southwest during the afternoon hours
For the afternoon eruption phase that began around 1700 UTC, GOES-16 False Color RGB, Ash Height, Ash Effective Radius and Ash Loading products from the NOAA/CIMSS Volcanic Cloud Monitoring site (below) indicated that the (predominantly ash) cloud reached heights of 6-7 km at times, with the ash consisting of generally small particles at relatively low levels of ash loading.
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On the following day (22 February), GOES-16 Split Window Difference along with SO2 RGB and Ash RGB images (above) showed the volcanic clouds produced by 2 additional eruptive periods — with the first cloud drifting southward, followed by the additional clouds drifting to the east-southeast.
During these eruptions, there were more notable indications of an SO2-ash mixture — for example, in a toggle between the 2 RGB image types at 1701 UTC (below), note the darker shades of orange in the Ash RGB along with brighter shades of pink to violet in the SO2 RGB (suggestive of an ash/SO2 mixture) immediately east of the volcano summit.
GOES-16 Nighttime Microphysics RGB + daytime True Color RGB images (below) showed the southward transport of volcanic clouds during the nighttime hours into the following morning, with additional volcanic cloud pulses that moved to the east during the afternoon hours.
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