What's that?!

(Image credit: Baron Services)

On June 4, 2013, meteorologists in Huntsville, Ala., noticed a "blob" on their radar screen that looked like a strong thunderstorm, despite the fact the sun was shining and not a drop of rain could be found within a few hundred miles. After some sleuthing, and several wacky explanations, the scientists identified the culprit as man-made: a military test.

The Blob

(Image credit: Baron Services)

When the team looked at the blob using standard weather radar, all indications were it was a strong thunderstorm. Then they turned to so-called dual-polarity technology developed in the last few years by the National Weather Service. This advanced radar allows scientists to scan in both the horizontal and vertical directions. Shown here, the dual-pol radar: Green is usually light precipitation, yellow is moderate rain, and red is heavy precipitation, or it could be hail or even a tornado in extreme cases.

Spreading Blob

(Image credit: Baron Services)

An image of a mysterious blob seen in weather radar on June 4, 2013, in Huntsville, Ala.

Time Sequence

(Image credit: Baron Services)

"The blob quickly grew in the first few hours after it started … and then stayed about that size through the evening before dissipating," said Matthew Havin, data services manager at Baron Services.

Clear Skies

(Image credit: Baron Services)

The weird blob on the weather radar stumped meteorologists partly because the skies for a few hundred miles were relatively clear in Huntsville, Ala.

Scattered Energy

(Image credit: Baron Services)

Here's a look at weather radar using NEXRAD (Next Generation Radar), a technology in which the radar emits a burst of energy into the atmosphere. If that energy strikes an object, such as a raindrop, the energy gets scattered in all directions (blue), with a small fraction of that scattered energy directed back to the radar. The colors indicate the intensities of that energy reflected back at the radar, with blues and greens indicating low intensity and reds and purples indicating high intensities.

Dissipating Blob

(Image credit: Baron Services)

Another look at the blob using NEXRAD at 11 p.m. that day.