From till Wind 150º 10kt. Visibility 9700m. Nil Significant Cloud. Temporarly from till Visibility 4000m. Light Showers Rain . Broken Clouds 2500ft. With 40% probability, Temporarly from till Wind 180º 15kt. Gust 25kt. Visibility 2500m. Showers Rain . Broken Clouds 2000ft. With 30% probability, Temporarly from till Light Thunderstorm Rain . Becoming from till Temporarly from till Broken Clouds 1200ft. With 30% probability, Temporarly from till Broken Clouds 800ft. With 30% probability, Temporarly from till Visibility 4000m. Light Rain .
Raw: TAF LFPO 301700Z 3018/0124 15010KT CAVOK TEMPO 3018/3021 4000 -SHRA BKN025TCU PROB40 TEMPO 3018/3020 18015G25KT 2500 SHRA BKN020CB PROB30 TEMPO 3018/3020 -TSRA BECMG 0101/0103 VRB03KT TEMPO 0104/0110 BKN012 PROB30 TEMPO 0104/0109 BKN008 PROB30 TEMPO 0107/0112 4000 -RA PROB30 TEMPO 0115/0119 27010G25KT TSRA BKN020CB BECMG 0120/0122 27010KT
Radar and precipitation nowcast for Viry-Châtillon
Drizzle
Light
Moderate
Heavy
Very Heavy
Hail
The location marker is placed on Viry-Châtillon.
This animation shows the precipitation radar for the selected time range, as well as a 2h forecast.
Orange crosses indicate lightning. Data provided by nowcast.de (available in USA, Europe, Australia). Drizzle or light snow fall might be invisible for the radar. Precipitation intensity is colour coded, ranging from turquoise to red.
Current satellite and rain images for Viry-Châtillon, France
The location marker is placed on Viry-Châtillon. [More]
The real-time satellite image combines visible light during daytime with infrared radiation during nighttime. At night, the image is not dark as infrared radiation can detect temperature differences. Unfortunately, low clouds and fog are difficult to distinguish from ground temperatures and thus can be almost invisible during the night. Meteosat satellite images for Europe are updated in real-time every 5 minutes. GOES-16/GOES-17 (North & South America) and Himawari (Asia) images update every 10 minutes.
Precipitation is estimated from radar and satellites. Precipitation estimates from satellites are less accurate at night than during daytime.