|
|
El Niño-La Niña Sea Surface Temperature, Height, and Wind Anomalies: Jan. 1997 through Dec. 1999
|
This animation shows the onset of the very strong 1997 El Niño, followed by its collapse and replacement by La Niña. Anomalously warm waters slosh across the Pacific in late 1997 as El Niño begins and the equatorial trade winds diminish in strength. In May 1998, the El Niño event disperses and is rapidly replaced by its reciprocal phenomenon, La Niña, with anomalously cold water along the eastern equatorial Pacific and a reversal of the wind flow patterns.
|
|
|
|
El Nino-La Nina sea surface temperature, height, and wind anomalies in the Pacific for January 1997 through December 1999. Wind anomalies stop at September 1999.
Duration: 1.3 minutes
Available formats:
1280x720 (30 fps)
MPEG-2
163 MB
640x480 (29.97 fps)
MPEG-1
29 MB
352x240 (29.97 fps)
MPEG-1
10 MB
320x238
JPEG
11 KB
160x80
PNG
19 KB
80x40
PNG
5 KB
How to play our movies
|
Animation Number: | 793 |
Animator: | Greg Shirah (SVS) (Lead) |
Completed: | 1999-12-21 |
Scientist: | Antonio Busalacchi (NASA/GSFC) |
Instruments: | DMSP/SSMI
|
| NOAA-14/AVHRR |
| TOPEX/Poseidon |
Data sets: | Sea Surface Height Anomaly
|
| Sea Surface Temperature Anomaly |
| Sea Surface Wind Anomaly |
Data Collected: | 1997/01/01-1999/12/31 |
Series: | El Niño and La Niña |
Video: | SVS1999-0030 * |
Keywords:
DLESE
>> Atmospheric science
SVS
>> HDTV
DLESE
>> Physical oceanography
|
|
Please give credit for this item to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio |
*Please note: the SVS does not fulfill requests for copies of the tapes in our library. On some of our animation pages, there is a direct link to a video distribution service from which tapes, handled by the Public Affairs Office (PAO)/Goddard TV, including some of our animations may be ordered. General information on this service can be found here. |
|
Back to Top
|
|
|
|