Von Kármán vortices near Canary Islands, Meteosat-12, 10 June 2026

Image of the week: Swirling cloud patterns south of the Canary Islands

 

Watching our Earth from space

Von Kármán vortices near Canary Islands, Meteosat-12, 10 June 2026
Von Kármán vortices near Canary Islands, Meteosat-12, 10 June 2026

This week’s image of the week focuses on wave-like cloud swirls southwest of the Canary islands. The image was captured by the Meteosat-12 satellite in geostationary orbit, 36,000km above the Earth.

Last Updated

15 June 2026

Published on

15 June 2026

The cloud patterns are known as von Kármán Vortices and are formed over the ocean when islands disrupt the wind flow. The strength of the wind affects the patterns of the swirls.

Von Kármán vortices are named after Theodore von Kármán, the pioneering Hungarian-American physicist and aeronautical engineer.

Von Kármán vortices near Canary Islands, Meteosat-12, 10 June 2026

Von Kármán vortices image

This image was captured by the FCI instrument onboard Meteosat-12 on 10 June 2026.

The Meteosat weather satellites provide imagery for the early detection of fast-developing severe weather, weather forecasting and climate monitoring.

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Spot cloud vortices from Meteosat-12 on our Earth view livestream.

Access weather data from the EUMETSAT User Portal.