California's fast-moving Creek Fire spawns 'fire cloud' visible from space

Fires continue to ravage California, with five new blazes igniting since Friday (Sept. 4).

The worst of those fires started on Friday and has already covered more than 75,000 acres (300 square kilometers). Called the Creek Fire, it has likely spawned fire tornadoes and forced the California Air National Guard to rescue more than 200 people trapped by the flames, according to the Washington Post.

The Creek Fire also created a staggering “fire cloud” that a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) satellite could see from space. 

“@NOAA’s #GOES17 has been monitoring California’s #CreekFire, which grew explosively today after igniting in the Sierra National Forest on Friday,” NOAA’s public affairs office wrote on Twitter on Sunday (Sept. 6). “In this loop, you can see the fire’s extraordinary #Pyrocumulonimbus cloud, which reached an estimated 45,000+ ft [14,000 meters, or about 8.5 miles] high.”

A pyrocumulonimbus cloud is basically a thunder cloud triggered by the heat and moisture that a fire kicks into the atmosphere, according to NASA. Such structures can also send huge amounts of pollutants into the upper atmosphere, according to NASA.

A second NOAA Twitter account shared additional imagery from the same GOES-17 satellite, which shows the spread of the Creek Fire. GOES-17 has monitored weather in the Western U.S. since its launch in 2018.

Most recently, the same satellite spotted smoke billowing across nearly all of California and Nevada in the evening of Monday (Sept. 7), according to a NOAA tweet. According to California’s fire agency, the five fires sparked since Friday have burned more than 100,000 acres (400 square kilometers).

Source: Space.com

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