On 15 July 2017 two pyroCbs formed in the British Columbia. GOES-15 detected the smoke plume and pyroCb cloud, as well as the fires hot spots. The first pyroCb cloud (~52.7º N, 124ºW) formed around 23:30 UTC on 15 July . The second formed shortly after around 52.9º N 124.1ºE. Starting at 23:00 UTC on 15 July, the animation below shows GOES-15 0.63 µm visible (left) and 3.9 µm shortwave IR (right) . In the shortwave IR images, the red pixels indicate very hot IR brightness temperatures exhibited by the fire source regions.
In addition, using GOES-15 10.7 μm IR channel the cloud-top IR brightness temperature could be found. The animation below, starting at 0:00 UTC on 16 July, shows the brightness temperature for the first pyroCb cloud reaching near -41ºC at 2 UTC (green color enhancement). However, the second pyroCb does not reach the -40ºC. A better resolution satellite confirms that this is a pyroCb.
A 1-km resolution NOAA-19 AVHRR 10.8 µm Infrared Window image (below;courtesy ofRené Servranckx) revealed a minimum cloud-top IR brightness temperature of -39.7º C (dark blue color enhancement) for the first pyroCb and -49.5º C for the second (green color enhancement) at 1:30 UTC on 16 July.
Suomi NPP OMPS Aerosol Index images (courtesy of Colin Seftor) shows the transport of smoke on 16 July . This shows max AI near the source of the pyroCb.