Thursday, 1 February 2024: 2:15 PM
323 (The Baltimore Convention Center)
A wide range of RGB Imagery products are now available from the GOES ABI instrument, but less than a decade earlier, these false-color imagery products were only seen over Europe and Africa within the suite of the EUMETSAT SEVIRI geostationary instrument. The issue of fog and low clouds as applied to aviation and ground transportation hazards has been a long-standing challenge where satellite imagery provides notable value to visually inspect large spatial areas vs relying on in situ point observations. A legacy channel difference product was the standard satellite imagery tool, but the Nighttime Microphysics RGB would soon be introduced with GOES-R and -S where users had no interpretation experience. As part of the GOES Proving Ground efforts, the SPoRT program utilized existing NASA LEO satellites to demonstrate the future ABI capabilities. Operational users were able to test and adopt the RGBs from NASA LEO instruments prior to the GOES-R launch in order to be ready for the wealth of new channels available from ABI. The transition experience and methods from these proxy RGBs to the start of the GOES-R ABI era to the present day provides insights to the value of these new qualitative products in operations and to how the transition method of such products can be successfully implemented as well as future needs in the RGB Imagery area.

