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  Publications - SeaWinds Captures Fury of Typhoon Olga

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Typhoon Olga - Atlantic
Click Here for a High Resolution Image.
Typhoon Olga - Atlantic
Click Here for a High Resolution Image.

These images show wind speeds and direction in the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Ocean on August 1, 1999, gathered by the SeaWinds radar instrument flying onboard the QuikScat satellite. The intense surface winds of Typhoon Olga, represented by yellow spirals, can be seen moving around South Korea in the China Sea. QuikScat tracks its birth as a tropical depression in the Philippines and its northward journey in the western Pacific to its landfall in Korea. The eastern North Pacific is dominated by a persistent high-pressure system, whose anticyclonic (clockwise) flow creates strong winds blowing parallel to the coast of Canada and the United States. Three groups of very intense winter storms can be seen around Antarctica, which are associated with the season of maximum sea ice in that region of the world.

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