Hazard Mapping System Fire and Smoke Product
The HMS is an interactive processing system that allows the trained satellite analysts in the
Satellite Analysis Branch (SAB), within the Satellite Services Division (SSD), to manually integrate data from various automated fire detection algorithms with GOES
and polar (Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR),
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer Fire Algorithm (MODIS) and
Defense Meteorological Satellite Program/Operational Linescan System (DMSP/OLS)) images.
The result is a quality controlled display of the locations of fires and significant smoke plumes
detected by meteorological satellites.
The most recent HMS product, and the automated
layers used to create it, can best be viewed through our
SSD Fire Web-GIS page.
The most recent HMS product is shown below:
Analysis for day 10/15/2004 last updated at 10/16/2004 15:38:6 GMT
Fires are in red. Fire size has been increased so fires are visible in this large view.
Smoke, when detected by the analyst, is in gray.
The locations of any significant smoke-producing fires are fed daily to the Smoke Forecasting Demo
Project at NOAA's Air Resources Lab. If you like this Demo
please contact us, as we are collecting requirements to make this
program operational.
A new pre-operational product, the
GOES Aerosol/Smoke Product (GASP), is now available online.
The information on fire position should be used as
a general guidance and for strategic planning. Tactical decisions, such as the activation of a response to fight these fires, should not be made without
other information to corroborate the fire's existence and location.
Users should note:
- Areas outlined by green in the graphic above are the focus of the analysis. Coverage outside the 48 contiguous US states will typically be turned on seasonally or as significant smoke impacts the US.
- The HMS product for any given day is created and updated by a satellite analyst between 1pm and 11pm Eastern time. After 11pm, the analysis is fine-tuned as time permits. The final product for the previous day is "completed" for the archive at the beginning of the next day's fire shift.
- The fire sizes depicted in the product are primarily determined by the field
of view of the satellite instrument, or the resolution of the analysis tool.
They should not be used to estimate specific fire perimeters.
Individual Fire Layers
ABBA - Automated Biomass Burning Algorithm
FIMMA - Fire Identification Mapping and Monitoring Algorithm
MODIS - Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer Fire Algorithm
Contact Address: SSDFireTeam@noaa.gov