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Showy Swirls Around Jeju Island
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February 19, 2026
The tallest point in South Korea is not located in the
Taebaek Mountains
that run along the country’s
eastern coast
. Rather, it is found atop a volcanic peak on Jeju Island, about 100 kilometers (60 miles) south of the Korean Peninsula. In winter 2026, winds blew past the island in just the right way to send clouds spinning in its wake.
The
MODIS
(Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) on NASA’s
Terra
satellite captured this image of swirling clouds—and colorful, turbulent water—near Jeju Island on February 19, 2026. The island rises about 1,950 meters (6,400 feet) above the sea surface. At its center is
Hallasan
, a shield volcano that last erupted in the 11th century and contains a notable
network of lava tubes
.
The trailing, staggered spirals, called
von Kármán vortex streets
, form when a fluid passes a tall, isolated, stationary object. If winds are too weak, clouds simply flow smoothly past, and if winds are too strong, vortices cannot maintain their shape. In the sweet spot, with winds between
18 and 54 kilometers
(11 and 34 miles) per hour, clouds trace the airflow in patterns of counterrotating vortices. Though the underlying physics is the same, the appearance of the vortices can vary: sometimes they look wispy, as they do here, and other times they form more sharply defined, parallel rows, as they did at the same location the
previous day
.
The seas, as well as the atmosphere, were turbulent near Jeju Island in mid-February. To the west, a large plume of sediment coming off the coast of China’s Jiangsu province turned waters murky. While brown, sediment-laden water is present in the shallow nearshore area year-round, expansive plumes like this one are
common during winter
. Research suggests that seasonal
changes in currents
and
vertical mixing
of the water column may account for the large winter plumes.
NASA Earth Observatory image by Michala Garrison, using MODIS data from NASA
EOSDIS LANCE
and
GIBS/Worldview
. Story by Lindsey Doermann.
Downloads
February 19, 2026
JPEG (2.74 MB)
References & Resources
Global Volcanism Program,
Halla
. Accessed February 23, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory (2024, February 24)
Sediment Fans Out Over the Yangtze Bank
. Accessed February 23, 2026.
NASA Earth Observatory (2008, November 16)
Cheju Island, South Korea
. Accessed February 23, 2026.
UNESCO World Heritage Convention (2018)
Jeju Volcanic Island and Lava Tubes
. Accessed February 23, 2026.
Weather Underground (2019, December)
Whirls, Curls, and Little Swirls: The Science Behind Von Karman Vortices
. Accessed February 23, 2026.
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— Source: NASA News (https://science.nasa.gov/earth/earth-observatory/showy-swirls-around-jeju-island/)