The
South Sandwich Islands, in the far southern Atlantic Ocean, are often
shrouded with thick cloud, making it difficult to view the region from
space. Sometimes, however, the use of false-color imagery can be used to
reveal events that would otherwise be obscured under cloud cover.
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aboard
NASA’s Aqua satellite flew over the South Sandwich Islands on April 19,
2014 and acquired this false-color image of the cloudy scene.
This false-color image uses a combination of non-visible (middle
infrared and infrared) and visible (red) light captured in bands 7, 2,
and 1, respectively, to distinguish clouds from snow and ice. Here the
ice-covered islands appear bright turquoise, the clouds light turquoise
and the water in the ocean appears deep black. Because the volcanic
plume is a moist mixture of gas and ash, it reflects all three forms of
light relatively well, so it appears nearly white.
In the north of this image, a thin plume of white rises from the
volcano on Zavodovski island, the northernmost of the South Sandwich
Islands and streams to the northeast. Further south, a wider white plume
can be seen blowing across the Atlantic Ocean. This plume rises from
the Mount Michael volcano, which is a young and frequently active
stratovolcano located on Saunders Island, near the center of the South
Sandwich Island chain.
The white plume from Mount Michael forms a chain of swirling eddies
as it blows to the northeast. To the south, similar eddies can be seen
behind three other islands. These are known as Von Kármán vortices.
These vortices can form nearly anywhere that fluid flow is disturbed by
an object. Because the atmosphere behaves like a fluid, when streaming
air hits a blunt object, such as a mountain peak, the wind is forced
around the object. The disturbance in the flow of the wind propagates
downstream in a double row of vortices that alternate their direction of
rotation, much like the eddies seen behind a pier in a river as water
rushes past.
Image Credit: Jeff Schmaltz/MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC
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