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This site has successfully transitioned the image data source from GOES-16 to
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10 Jun 2025 - 06:18 EDT
10 Jun 2025 - 10:18 UTC
GOES-West CONUS - Tropospheric Dust Content
1 hour loop - 12 images - 5 minute update
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Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0916 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0921 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0926 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0931 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0936 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0941 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0946 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0951 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 0956 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 1001 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 1006 UTC
Tropospheric Dust Content - RGB for identifying tropospheric dust - 10 Jun 2025 - 1011 UTC
Dust RGB key:
1 - Dust plume, day (bright magenta, pink) Note: Dust at night becomes purple shades below 3 km
2 - Low, water cloud (light purple)
3 - Desert surface, day (light blue)
4 - Mid, thick clouds (tan shades)
5 - Mid, thin cloud (green)
6 - Cold, thick clouds (red)
7 - High, thin ice clouds (black)
8 - Very thin clouds, over warm surface (blue)
Dust RGB Dust can be hard to see in visible and infrared imagery because it is optically thin, or because it appears similar to other cloud types such as cirrus. The RGB product is able to contrast airborne dust from clouds using band differencing and the IR thermal channel. The IR band differencing allows dust storms to be observed during both daytime and at night.