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NOAA Satellite Spots Striking 'Cloud Streets' Off Florida After Arctic Blast

NOAA imagery reveals cold air over warm water organized the atmosphere into parallel cloud bands.

Overview

  • GOES-19/GOES East captured long, parallel cloud bands off the southeastern U.S. on February 1, 2026, and NOAA released the image on February 3.
  • An Arctic outbreak pushed frigid, dry air into Florida, setting up the cold-over-warm conditions that produced the formation and prompted freeze warnings deep into the state.
  • As the air absorbed heat and moisture from the Gulf and Atlantic, it rose, cooled, and condensed beneath a warm layer aloft, generating horizontal convective rolls.
  • A clear gap appeared just offshore because the incoming air needed time over water to gather enough heat and moisture for clouds to develop.
  • The bands aligned with the wind and can curl into von Kármán vortex patterns when flow meets obstacles, a behavior well documented in past NASA MODIS imagery.