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Table of Contents for GOES-8

GOES
GOES/IR4
GOES/AMSU
GOES/HIRS
GOES-8
GOES-8/Imager

GOES
Image of GOES
Movie   ID   Title
Hurricane Ike threatens the entire Gulf Coast on September 12, 2008. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour. Yellow is 1 inch of rain per hour and red is 2 inches of rain per hour.   3560   Hurricane Ike Attacks the Gulf Coast on September 12, 2008
Hurricane Ike strengthens in the Gulf. TRMM observed this 17 km tower.   3559   Hurricane Ike on September 10, 2008 at 1745 UTC
NASA's TRMM satellite peers beneath the clouds to capture this view of Hurricane Ike. The 12 km towers in the outer band, shown in red, lead scientists to believe that the inner eye is eroding as the outer bands are becoming better defined. This could limit rapid intensity development in the very near term.   3558   Hurricane Ike Strengthens in the Gulf of Mexico on September 10, 2008
Hurricane Ike slams into Cuba at 7:04 EDT on September 8, 2008.   3557   Hurricane Ike Slams Cuba on September 8, 2008
Notice the rainbands that power the storm. Hurricane force winds extended outward up to 45 miles from the center of this storm and tropical storm force winds extended outward up to 140 miles.   3553   Hurricane Ike on September 4, 2008
TRMM's Precipitation Radar (PR) instrument observed this 17 kilometer tower in the eatern eyewall as Tropical Storm Hanna was intensifying to a category 1 hurricane on September 1, 2008.   3550   Tropical Storm Hanna's Towering Thunderclouds
This animation shows the very dangerous Hurricane Gustav on August 31, 2008.   3545   Hurricane Gustav on August 31, 2008
Hurricane Gustav weakened as it stalled over Haiti. The storm has already killed 22 people in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.   3543   Hurricane Gustav on August 27, 2008
Hurricane Gustav slams into Haiti. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour.   3542   Hurricane Gustav Slams Haiti
Tropical Storm Fay stalled over Eastern Florida dumping over 24 inches of rain. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour.   3541   Tropical Storm Fay Inundates Florida
Tropical Storm Eduoard on August 5, 2008. Peer through the clouds to see the storms structure. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour.   3536   Tropical Storm Edouard
Hurricane Dean hits the Yucatan Peninsula on August 21, 2007.   3448   Hurricane Dean on August 21, 2007
Hurricane Dean attacks  Jamaica and threatens the Yucatan Peninsula.  The TRMM satellite peers under the clouds to see the rain that powers this intense storm.   3447   Hurricane Dean on August 19, 2007
The short version of the Cryosphere Tour, with narration and music.   3355   A Short Tour of the Cryosphere
Tropical Cyclone Larry on March 19, 2006 just before it made landfall in Australia.  Look underneath of the clouds to see the rain that powers the storm. 
Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour. Green shows at least 0.5 inches of rain per hour. Yellow is at least 1.0 inches of rain and red is at least 2.0 inches of rain per hour.   3347   Tropical Cyclone Larry on March 19, 2006
Hurricane Wilma:  October 20, 2005 at 1645Z   3288   Hurricane Wilma on October 20, 2005
Hurricane Wilma attacks the Cayman islands and threatens the Yucatan Pennisula.  Look under the cloud layer to see the rain that powers the storm.   3284   NASA's TRMM Satellite Captures Hurricane Wilma Data on October 20, 2005
Peer through the clouds to see the rainfall that powers Hurricane Wilma.  Blue represents areas where at least 0.25 inches of rain fell per hour.   3283   TRMM Observes Hurricane Wilma on October 19, 2005
Tropical Storm Wilma on Monday, October 17, 2005.  The blue region represents where the satellite sees light rainfall.   3280   Hurricane Wilma from TRMM: October 17, 2005
Hurricane Rita on Friday, September 23, 2005.  The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3263   Hurricane Rita from TRMM: September 23, 2005
Hurricane Rita threatens the gulf coast.  Blue under the clouds represents the energy of the storm, its rain.   3262   Hurricane Rita from TRMM: September 22, 2005
Hurricane Rita on September 21, 2005 at 0909Z.  The storm has a 25 nautical mile eye diameter.  Blue represents the rain structure that is fueling the storm.   3260   Hurricane Rita from TRMM: September 21, 2005
Hurricane Rita on September 20, 2005.  The colored rainbands beneath the clouds depict the rain that fuels the storm.  Blue represents areas where 0.5 inches of rain per hour.  Green represents 1.0 inches per hour.   3258   Hurricane Rita from TRMM: September 20, 2005
Look under the clouds of Hurricane Ophelia to see the rain that fuels the storm.  Areas of blue indicate regions where 0.5 inches of rain per hour were recorded.   3245   Hurricane Ophelia from TRMM: September 11, 2005 1826 Zulu
Hurricane Ophelia at 1648 Zulu.
Peer under the clouds to see the rain structure fueling the storm.   3244   Hurricane Ophelia from TRMM: September 11, 2005 1648 Zulu
Hurricane Katrina strikes the southeastern Louisiana and the northern gulf coast as a category 4 hurricane. Look under the clouds to see the rainfall that powers the storm.   3219   Hurricane Katrina from TRMM: August 29, 2005
Hurricane Katrina on August 28, 2005.  Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour. Green shows at least 0.5 inches of rain per hour. Yellow is at least 1.0 inches of rain and red is at least 2.0 inches of rain per hour.   3218   Hurricane Katrina from TRMM: August 28, 2005
Portrait image of Hurricane Emily as it makes landfall in Mexico.    3215   Hurricane Emily: July 20, 2005
Hurricane Katrina moves slowly toward Florida and dumps 6 to 10 inches of accumulated rainfall over the region.  In this animation, the amount of rainfall can be seen through color. blue is 0.25 inches per hour.  Green is 0.5 inches per hour.  Yellow is 1 inch per hour and red is 2 or more inches per hour.   3214   Hurricane Katrina from TRMM: August 25, 2005
VIDEO WITH MUSIC AND CAPTIONS   3181   A Tour of the Cryosphere
Mission proposal for polar orbiting cloud sensor (w- swaths)   2935   Mission Proposal: Polar GOES-like spacecraft (riding the spacecraft - animated swaths)
Mission proposal for polar orbiting cloud sensor (with animated clouds)   2934   Mission Proposal: Polar GOES-like spacecraft (riding the spacecraft - animated clouds)
9-6-01 GOES data showing disturbances off the coast of Africa.   2818   Recipe of a Hurricane (Part 1) - Initial Tropical Disturbance (Match Rendered)
Hurricane Isabel just east of the Bahamas on September 15, 2003 at 15:30 UTC.   2805   Hurricane Isabel Eyes the Eastern U.S., September 15, 2003
View of Asia   2652   Apollo 17 30th Anniversary: Water Vapor in the Atmosphere
Peel away the clouds to reveal Hurricane Hernans rain structure.  Yellow represents 0.5 inches of rain per hour, green is 1.0 inches of rain per hour and red is 2.0 or higher.   2519   Hurricane Hernan, September 1, 2002
Peel away the clouds to reveal Tropical Storm Cristobal rain structure. Yellow denotes 0.5+ inches of rain, green denotes 1.0+ inches of rain, and red is 2.0+ inches of rain.     2498   Tropical Storm Cristobal
Zoom down to Hurricane Alma on May 29, 2002. Scan across the storm and remove the cloud tops to reveal 3 isosurfaces.  (Yellow = 0.5 inches-hour, Green = 1.0 inches-hour, Red=2.0+ inches-hour   2457   Tropical Cyclone Alma on May 29, 2002
Another view along the satellite ground track, with the data fully revealed.   2155   Hurricane Adolph from TRMM: May 28, 2001
Hurricane Keith as the TRMM scan plane slices through the eye.   2090   Hurricane Keith from TRMM: October 2, 2000 (3 Surfaces)
Movie zooming down to Hurricane Keith and revealing the TRMM precipitation data taken October 5, 2000   2001   Hurricane Keith from TRMM: October 5, 2000
Animation cross-section view of Hurricane Keith off Honduras on October 2, 2000   2000   Hurricane Keith from TRMM: October 2, 2000
A live screen capture of the interaction of a virtual
hand with data from a computer simulation of Hurricane Florence.
The hand grabs and moves the data visualzation, then activates a direct
readout of data from the position of the virtual fingertip.  Finally, wind
streamline tracer ribbons are generated from the moving fingertip.   1390   VIS-5D VR Animations: Virtual Hand Functionality
A fly-in to Hurricane Florence on September 13, 2000, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   1152   Hurricane Florence from TRMM: September 13, 2000
A fly-in to Tropical Storm Florence on September 12, 2000, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   1151   Tropical Storm Florence from TRMM: September 12, 2000
A fly-in to Hurricane Floyd on September 13, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface is revealed.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   1148   Hurricane Floyd from TRMM: September 13, 1999
A fly-in to Hurricane Alberto on August 8, 2000, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   1147   Hurricane Alberto from TRMM: August 8, 2000
A flyby of Atlanta showing visible imagery, daytime thermal data, and nighttime thermal data taken by an airborne ATLAS instrument on May 11 and 12, 1997.  This imagery is surrounded by Landsat Thematic Mapper data taken on June 27, 1998.  The flyby is followed by a timelapse of land use in the region from 1973 to 1997 from Landsat data and a sequence of GOES imagery showing cloud and thunderstorm formation over the Atlanta heat island.   1049   3D Atlanta Heat Island
A fly-in to Hurricane Irene on October 14, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   734   Hurricane Irene from TRMM: October 14, 1999
A fly-in to Hurricane Gert on September 16, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   729   Hurricane Gert from TRMM: September 16, 1999
A fly-in to Hurricane Floyd on September 16, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   728   Hurricane Floyd from TRMM: September 16, 1999
A fly-in to Hurricane Floyd on September 13, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   726   Hurricane Floyd from TRMM: September 13, 1999
A fly-in to Hurricane Dennis on August 27, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   722   Hurricane Dennis from TRMM: August 27, 1999 (slower)
A fly-in to Hurricane Dennis on August 27, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   721   Hurricane Dennis from TRMM: August 27, 1999
A fly-in to Tropical Storms Emily and Cindy on August 25, 1999, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   720   Tropical Storms Emily and Cindy from TRMM: August 25, 1999
This animation shows a fly-in to Hurricane Bonnie showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM on August 22, 1998.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.   227   Hurricane Bonnie from TRMM with Cloud Tower: August 22, 1998 (Short Version)
This animation shows a fly-in to Hurricane Bonnie showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM on August 22, 1998.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.   222   Hurricane Bonnie from TRMM with Cloud Tower: August 22, 1998 (Long Version)
A fly-in to Hurricane Mitch on October 27, 1998, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface is revealed, then a second surface of higher precipitation is revealed.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   221   Hurricane Mitch from TRMM: October 27, 1998 with Two Surfaces
A three-dimensional view of the cloud structure of Hurricane Mitch   220   Hurricane Mitch from TRMM: October 27, 1998
Precipitation rates on the ground superimposed on an cloud image of Hurricane Georges taken on September 27, 1998.  Red represents regions of highest rainfall.   216   Hurricane Georges from TRMM: September 27, 1998
An image of Hurricane Georges taken by the VIRS instrument on TRMM on September 27, 1998.   215   Hurricane Georges from TRMM: September 24, 1998
A fly-in to Hurricane Georges on September 23, 1998, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.   214   Hurricane Georges from TRMM: September 23, 1998
A fly-in to Hurricane Earl on September 2, 1998, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   212   Hurricane Earl from TRMM: September 2, 1998
A low angle view of the 18 km Hurricane Bonnie cloud tower   211   Hurricane Bonnie from TRMM and GOES with Cloud Tower: August 22, 1998
A fly-in to Hurricane Bonnie on August 25, 1998, showing the three-dimensional structure of the precipitation as measured by the Precipitation Radar instrument on TRMM.  In this animation, a surface of constant precipitation is colored by the value of the precipitation on the ground under the surface.  The global cloud cover data was measured by GOES.   210   Hurricane Bonnie from TRMM: August 25, 1998
An interactive exploration of a computational model of Hurricane Florence using an immersive environment controlled by a boom, with an inset of the boom operator.   122   Hurricane Florence Mesoscale Simulation Results Using Virtual Reality
A live screen capture of an interaction with data from a computer simulation of Hurricane Florence   120   VIS-5D VR Animations: Hurricane Florence
An interactive exploration of a computational model of Hurricane Florence using an immersive environment controlled by a boom   82   Hurricane Florence
An interactive exploration of a computational model of Hurricane Florence using an immersive environment controlled by a boom, with an inset of the boom operator.   81   Hurricane Florence with Inset of VR Operator
Starting from space, this fly-by approaches the Earth and, then travels underwater, following the ocean floor topography, passing boats, sea life, and submarines in the process, finally resurfaceing above the water and traveling back into space.   78   Ocean Planet: Final Version with Credits
An animated fly-by from a point in space above North America to soar over the Pacific, then to dive near Hawaii and fly underwater past Japan, through the Mariana trench, to resurface near New Guinea. This animation is specifically designed to be looped.   59   Ocean Planet: Final Version
The opening sequence of the Ocean Planet flyby including a map inset   58   Ocean Planet: Partial Tour with Map Route Inset

GOES-IR4
Movie   ID   Title
Hurricane Rita crosses the Gulf of Mexico and moves inland.   3438   Hurricane Rita Push In
This animation shows snow cover, sea ice, clouds, sea surface temperature and biosphere while the view moves from North America across the Atlantic Ocean to Northern Africa and Europe.   3383   Sequence of Clouds, Snow Cover, Sea Ice, Sea Surface Temperature and Biosphere
Full version with audio and annotations   3354   27 Storms: Arlene to Zeta
Hurricane Wilma and Tropical Storm Alpha rain accumulation trails as of October 25, 2005   3290   Hurricane Wilma Rain Accumulation
Hurricane Wilma clouds and sea surface temperatures   3282   Hurricane Wilma -- SSTs and Clouds
Hurricane Rita rain accumularion from Sept 24, 2005 at 07:45 GMT   3268   Hurricane Rita Rain Accumulation
Hurricane Rita clouds and sea surface temperatures on Sep 23, 2005 at 13:45GMT   3261   Hurricane Rita Sea Surface Temperature and Clouds
Hurricane Katrina IR clouds from GOES on 29 Aug 2005 at 00:15 GMT   3251   Hurricane Katrina GOES Clouds
Sea surface temperature with clouds overlaid showing the first half of the 2005 hurricane season  (no storm tracks)   3226   Sea Surface Temperature, Clouds, and Tropical Depression/Storm/Hurricane Tracks from June 1, 2005 to August 29, 2005
Sea surface temperature showing Hurricane Katrina's cold water wake in blues (08-29-2005)   3222   Hurricane Katrina Sea Surface Temperature
Hurricane Katrina rain accumulation for the period Aug 23 through 29   3221   Hurricane Katrina Rain Accumulation
Hurricanes Fabian and Isabel leave cold water trails in their wake.   2897   Cold Water Trails from Hurricanes Fabian and Isabel (WMS)
As the hurricanes move through the ocean, they each leave a wake of cold water.  This visualization shows the cold water trails left by Hurricanes Fabian and Isabel.  The red/orange/blue colors represent the ocean temperatures (orange/red is 82 degrees F and higher).   2824   Cold Water Trails from Hurricanes Fabian and Isabel
This visualization shows hurricanes Fabian and Isabel using GOES data. The clouds are extruded to give a sense of depth.   2823   Hurricanes Fabian and Isabel from GOES
Animation of isosurfaces showing the structure of Erin on September 10, 2001.   2821   Recipe of a Hurricane - Spin Around Clouds and Isosurfaces
Hurricane Erin on 9-10-01 as seen through VIRS-IR and GOES-IR.  MODIS-bluemarble is in the background.   2820   Recipe of a Hurricane (Part 2) -- Clouds and Isosurfaces (match rendered)

GOES-AMSU
Movie   ID   Title
Anatomy of Hurricane Isabel when it was far out in the Atlantic   3252   Anatomy of Hurricane Isabel
Hurricane Isabels structure as a category 4   2997   Hurricane Isabel: Under the Hood (PR and AMSU only)
Hurricane Isabel as a category 3   2996   Hurricane Isabel: Under the Hood (with popout boxes)
Hurricane Isabel as a category 3   2995   Hurricane Isabel: Under the Hood (background only)
Mission proposal beauty shot still   2933   Mission Proposal: Polar GOES-like spacecraft (beauty shot)

GOES-HIRS
Movie   ID   Title
Hurricane Isabels structure as a category 4   2997   Hurricane Isabel: Under the Hood (PR and AMSU only)
Hurricane Isabel as a category 3   2996   Hurricane Isabel: Under the Hood (with popout boxes)
Hurricane Isabel as a category 3   2995   Hurricane Isabel: Under the Hood (background only)

GOES-8
Movie   ID   Title
TRMM provides this view of Hurricane Ivan on September 16, 2004, as its eye makes landfall. TRMM lets us see through the clouds. Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3172   Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure with Cloud Overlay on September 16, 2004
Hurricane Ivan on September 9, 2004. It looks underneath of the storms clouds to reveal the underlying rain structure. Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3010   Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure Seen from TRMM September 9, 2004
Isabels rain structure:  The yellow isosurface represents areas where at least 0.5 inches of rain fell per hour.  The green isosurface show 1.0 inches of rain per hour and red displays where more than 2 inches of rain fell per hour.   2827   Hurricane Isabel Batters North Carolina, September 18, 2003
Peel the cloud layer away to see the actual rain structure of Hurricane Isabel on September 17, 2003.   2826   Hurricane Isabel Prepares to Make Landfall in North Carolina, September 17, 2003
Hurricane Isabel -  September 15, 2003.  The diameter of the eye measures 40 nautical miles.   2804   Hurricane Isabel Barrels Down on the East Coast, September 15, 2003
Hurricane Isabel on September 8, 2003.  Red= at least 2.0 inches of rain per hour, green is 1.0 inches of rain, and yellow is 0.5 inches of rain   2798   Hurricane Isabel, September 8, 2003
Hurricane Ignacio hits Baja, California on August 25, 2003.  Look beneath the clouds to see the rain structure that powers the storm.  Red is the heaviest rainfall.   2797   Hurricane Ignacio on August 25, 2003
Hurricane Fabian approaches Bermuda on September 4, 2003.  Look underneath the hood of the storm to see the engine of the storm, rain.  Green represents 0.5 inches of rain per hour, yellow is 1 inch per hour and red is 2 or more inches of rain per hour.   2794   Hurricane Fabian Approaches Bermuda, September 4, 2003
Rain structure of Hurricane Claudette   2783   Hurricane Claudette Approached Texas July 15, 2003
Scan across the clouds of Tropical Depression 14 to reveal the rain structure.  Blue represents areas where at least 0.5 inches of rain fell per hour.  Green shows at least 1.0 inch of rain. Yellow is 1.7 inches and red depicts more than 2.2 inches of rain per hour.   2642   Tropical Depression 14 on October 15, 2002
Peel Away the clouds to see the structure.   Light blue shows at least 1.0 inch of rain. Green represents at least 1.7 inches of rain.   Yellow is areas with over 2.0 inches of rain fell per hour, and red depicts more than 2.0 inches of rain per hour.   2635   Tropical Storm Kenna on October 22, 2002
The visualization zooms down to Tropical Depression Kyle just about to make landfall over northeastern Florida.   2618   Tropical Depression Kyle, October 10, 2002
This is the rain structure of Hurricane Lili with all of the clouds removed on October 2, 2002.  Yellow denotes areas of rain with 0.5 inches of rain per hour, Green denotes areas of 1.0 inches of rain per hour and Red shows areas with more than 2.0 inches of rain per hour   2563   Hurricane Lili, October 2, 2002
Tropical Storm Isodore   2561   Tropical Storm Isodore Makes Landfall in Louisiana, September 26, 2002
Peel away the clouds of Hurricane Isodore to reveal the rain structure.  Yellow represents areas iwhere at least 0.5 inches of rain fell per hour.  Green shows at least 1.0 inch of rain, and red depicts more than 2.0 inches of rain per hour.   2558   Hurricane Isodore on September 19, 2002
The rain structure of Tropical Storm Gustav: grey is 0.5 inches of rain, green is 1.0 inches of rain, and red is 2.0 inches of rain or more per hour   2552   Hurricane Gustav
Viewing the precipitation data along the TRMM swath.   2481   Hurricane Floyd: September 13, 1999
A view of Iris precipitation data, looking southeast.   2274   Hurricane Iris from TRMM: October 9, 2001
Our Solar System   1402   Earth Today 1998
Earth Today Logo   1401   Earth Today 1998 Introduction
An image of the clouds of Hurricane Bonnie taken by GOES on August 26, 1998   1150   Hurricane Bonnie Dissolving 'Crystal Cathedral'
Hurricanes Bonnie and Danielle from GOES-8 on August 28, 1998   1067   Sea Surface Temperature and Hurricane Connections: GOES - August 22, 1998 through September 3, 1998
A combined image of clouds from GOES and sea surface temperatures from TRMM in the Atlantic on August 28, 1998.  This image shows Hurricane Danielle right on top of the cooler ocean region caused by Hurricane Bonnie.   1066   Sea Surface Temp and Hurricane Connections: TRMM and GOES, Aug. 22, 1998 through Sept. 3, 1998 (Deluxe version)
A combined image of clouds from GOES and sea surface temperatures from TRMM in the Atlantic on August 28, 1998.  This image shows Hurricane Bonnie over the East Coast of the United States and the cool water track that Bonnie left in its wake.  Hurricane Danielle is in the lower right corner of the image.   1065   Sea Surface Temp and Hurricane Connections: TRMM and GOES, Aug. 22, 1998 through Sept. 3, 1998 (Basic version)
An animated sequence of cloud data from GOES showing Hurricane Dennis off the coast of Florida is added to the globe, with the animation speed and transparency of the data controlled interactively   800   Digital Earth Workbench: GOES Satellite data of Hurricane Dennis
Countdown Animation   328   Earth Today 1998 Countdown
The entire narrated Images video made for Supercomputing 97   251   Images of Earth and Space: SC97 Edition
GOES Hurricane Mitch 27 October 1998   226   Hurricane Mitch from GOES: October 27, 1998
GOES Hurricane Linda Sept. 1997 for Release in March 1998 -
fly across   225   Hurricane Linda from GOES: September 11, 1997 (Fly Across)
GOES Hurricane Linda Sept. 1997 for Release in March 1998 -
zoom in- rotate   224   Hurricane Linda from GOES: September 11, 1997 (Zoom In and Rotate)
Hurricane Linda as seen by GOES-8 on September 9, 1997   223   Hurricane Linda from GOES: September 11, 1997 (Zoom In)
GOES 1995 Atlantic close-up Hurricane Parade (medium-resolution still)   172   GOES Water Vapor: 1995 Hurricane Season
This image represents a one month sample (October 1983) of composite images from cloud cover data collected from a suite of U.S., European, and Japanese geostationary satellites and U.S. polar orbiting meteorological satellites.   155   The HoloGlobe Project (Version 3)
Narrated Hologlobe (version 2)   116   The HoloGlobe Project (Version 2)
Hologlobe (version 1)   96   The HoloGlobe Project (Version 1)

GOES-8-Imager
Movie   ID   Title
 TRMM provides this view of Hurricane Ivan on September 16, 2004, as its eye makes landfall.  TRMM lets us see through the clouds. Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3011   Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure seen by TRMM on September 16, 2004
Hurricane Ivan on September 13, 2004.  Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3008   Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure on September 13, 2004
This animation follows Hurricane Isabel (2003) from its birthplace in the Ethiopian Highlands of East Africa, across the Atlantic Ocean, to the United States.  Atlantic hurricanes are often formed as winds over the Gulf of Aden intersect with the Ethiopian Highlands.   2987   Hurricane Isabel Genesis
This animation shows a composite over the Atlantic Ocean of cloud cover data taken from the infrared sensors of several different satellites during September 2001.  Hurricane Erin progresses from the middle of the Atlantic Ocean to near the eastern coast of the United States.   2895   Infrared Cloud Cover over the Atlantic Ocean, September 2001 (WMS)
This animation is meant to be wrapped around a three-dimensional globe.  It shows a global composite of cloud cover data taken from the infrared sensors of several different satellites during September 2001.   2894   Global Infrared Cloud Cover, September 2001 (WMS)
This animation shows the cloud formations created by Hurricane Dennis in August, 1999.   2892   Satellite Imagery of Hurricane Dennis (WMS)


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