https://www.youtube.com/v/APkt5-mGutU#t=12
NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) have released the first images captured by their newest Earth-observing satellite, the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory, which launched into space Feb. 27.
The images show precipitation falling inside a March 10 cyclone over the northwest Pacific Ocean, approximately 1,000 miles east of Japan.
(http://images.meteociel.fr/im/7998/pac_storm_rrrider_still.8x8.0783_cwc2.jpg)
The GMI instrument has 13 channels that measure natural energy radiated by Earth's surface and also by precipitation itself. Liquid raindrops and ice particles affect the microwave energy differently, so each channel is sensitive to a different precipitation type. With the addition of four new channels, the GPM Core Observatory is the first spacecraft designed to detect light rain and snowfall from space.
(http://images.meteociel.fr/im/4918/pac_storm_still_with_ghz.0600_vzh7.jpg)
Me quiero imaginar una imagen de estas de un ciclón tropical. :babeo:
(http://images.meteociel.fr/im/2191/fig1_rgb_0_vbs4.png)
Una delicia que las organizaciones vayan sacando a la luz algunos de sus productos.
http://www.nasa.gov/press/2014/march/first-images-available-from-nasa-jaxa-global-rain-and-snowfall-satellite/#.Uzm60qh_uVP
Saludos.
:o :o :o
Aquí, en Europa, para ver algo así seguro que antes hay que pasar por caja...
Saludos.