In early-October 2012, intense bushfires blazed in Australia’s Northern Territory in a remote area northeast of Elliott. The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua
satellite captured this image of smoke from the fires streaming
northeast on October 6, 2012. Red outlines indicate hot spots where
MODIS detected unusually warm surface temperatures associated with
fires.
The light spots within the largest smoke plume are the tops of pyrocumulus clouds—tall, billowing clouds with well-defined borders. Such clouds form when intense heat from a fire pushes air rapidly upward, causing water vapor in the air to cool and condense into clouds. Pyrocumulus clouds sometimes generate intense thunderstorms that can either dampen the flames with drenching rains or propel the fire with strong winds.
Wildfires are quite common in this part of Australia. Some areas, such as the higher rainfall savanna woodlands in the northern part of Northern Territory, burn nearly every year.
The light spots within the largest smoke plume are the tops of pyrocumulus clouds—tall, billowing clouds with well-defined borders. Such clouds form when intense heat from a fire pushes air rapidly upward, causing water vapor in the air to cool and condense into clouds. Pyrocumulus clouds sometimes generate intense thunderstorms that can either dampen the flames with drenching rains or propel the fire with strong winds.
Wildfires are quite common in this part of Australia. Some areas, such as the higher rainfall savanna woodlands in the northern part of Northern Territory, burn nearly every year.
References
- Earth Observatory. (2010, August 31). Russian firestorm: Finding a fire cloud from space.
- Geosciences Australia. (2008, January). Understanding bushfire: trends in deliberate vegetation fires in Australia: Northern Territory. Accessed October 9, 2012.
NASA image courtesy Jeff Schmaltz, LANCE MODIS Rapid Response Team at NASA GSFC. Caption by Adam Voiland.
- Instrument:
- Aqua - MODIS - NASA
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