NOAA GOES Image Viewer website
19 May 2026 - 07:13 EDT
19 May 2026 - 11:13 UTC

GOES-19 Mesoscale view - Band 4 at 1°S - 78°W - Ecuador

30 frame animation displayed. This mesoscale location is no longer being actively produced.

To enlarge, pause animation & click the image. Hover over popups to zoom. Use slider to navigate.

  

  

  
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1500 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1500 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1501 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1501 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1502 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1502 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1503 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1503 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1504 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1504 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1505 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1505 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1506 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1506 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1507 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1507 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1508 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1508 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1509 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1509 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1510 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1510 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1511 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1511 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1512 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1512 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1513 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1513 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1514 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1514 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1515 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1515 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1516 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1516 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1517 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1517 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1518 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1518 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1519 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1519 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1520 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1520 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1521 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1521 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1522 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1522 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1523 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1523 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1524 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1524 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1525 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1525 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1526 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1526 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1527 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1527 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1528 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1528 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1529 UTC
Band 4 - 1.37 µm - Cirrus - Near IR - 18 Feb 2026 - 1529 UTC

1.37 µm - Cirrus Band - 2 km resolution - Band 4 will detect very thin cirrus clouds during the day. This band is centered in a strong water vapor absorption spectral region. It does not routinely sense the lower troposphere, where there is substantial water vapor, and thus provides excellent daytime sensitivity to high, very thin cirrus under most circumstances.

Band 4 is a visible channel and is therefore black during nighttime hours.

• For more details, see the Band 4 - ABI Quick Information Guide, (PDF, 532 KB)