The STAR webserver will be offline Tuesday Jan 20th, 2026 from approximately 07:30 to 12:00 EST for an upgrade.

NOAA GOES Image Viewer website
17 Jan 2026 - 20:14 EST
18 Jan 2026 - 01:14 UTC

GOES-19 Mesoscale view - Fire Temperature at 38°N - 75°W - Near Worcester County, MD

Half hour loop - 30 images - 1 minute update

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

  

  

  
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0029 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0029 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0033 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0033 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0034 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0034 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0035 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0035 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0036 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0036 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0037 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0037 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0038 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0038 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0042 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0042 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0043 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0043 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0044 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0044 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0045 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0045 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0046 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0046 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0047 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0047 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0049 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0049 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0051 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0051 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0052 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0052 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0054 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0054 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0055 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0055 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0056 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0056 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0057 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0057 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0058 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0058 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0059 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0059 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0100 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0100 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0101 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0101 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0102 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0102 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0103 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0103 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0104 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0104 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0106 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0106 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0110 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0110 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0111 UTC
Fire Temperature - RGB used to highlight fires - 18 Jan 2026 - 0111 UTC
legend for Fire Temperature RBG

Fire Temperature key:

1 - Warm fire
2 - Very warm fire
3 - Hot fire
4 - Very hot fire
5 - Burn scars
6 - Clear sky: land
7 - Clear sky: water/snow/night
8 - Water clouds
9 - Ice clouds


Fire Temperature RGB allows the user to identify where the most intense fires are occurring and differentiate these from "cooler" fires. The RGB takes advantage of the fact that from 3.9µm to shorter wavelengths, background solar radiation and surface reflectance increases. This means that fires need to be more intense in order to be detected by the 2.2 and 1.6µm bands, as more intense fires emit more radiation at these wavelengths. Therefore, small/"cool" fires will only show up at 3.9µm and appear red while increases in fire intensity cause greater contributions of the other channels resulting in white very intense fires.

• For more details, see the Fire Temperature RGB Quick Guide, (PDF, 1.2 MB)