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Table of Contents for VIS

IMAGE/VIS
Polar/VIS
TRMM/VIS
Viking/VIS

IMAGE-VIS
Movie   ID   Title
A snapshot of a high-intensity time in the storm.  The bright linear structure in the upper left is an artifact created by the edge of the instrument field-of-view.   2964   IMAGE Views of the Aurora from Space

Polar-VIS
Movie   ID   Title
Near the peak of the event, it has moved over Alaska.   3513   Auroral Substorm from Polar
This animation shows the aurora over the Northern Hemisphere as recorded by the Polar satellite on April 17, 1999.   2891   Aurora over the North Pole on April 17, 1999 (WMS)
A maximal time for the aurora (08:09:08 UT).   2857   Geomagnetic Storm: November 2003
Polar Visible Aurora from July 16, 2000   2043   Stills of the Polar Visible Aurora from July 16, 2000
Polar Visible Aurora from October 22, 1999   2040   Stills of the Polar Visible Aurora from October 22, 1999
Polar Visible Aurora from January 10, 1997   2038   Stills of the Polar Visible Aurora from January 10, 1997
An animation of the visible aurora in the northern hemisphere on July 16, 2000 as measured by Polar   2037   Polar Visible Aurora Animation: July 16, 2000
An animation of the visible aurora in the northern hemisphere on July 13, 2000 as measured by Polar   1211   Polar Visible Aurora Animation: July 13, 2000
An animation of the visible aurora in the northern hemisphere on July 15, 2000 as measured by Polar   1210   Polar Visible Aurora Animation: July 15, 2000
An animation of the visible aurora in the northern hemisphere from July 15, 2000 to July 16, 2000 as measured by Polar   1206   Polar Visible Aurora Animation: July 15, 2000 to July 16, 2000
Visible aurora over the North Pole on November 13, 1999 as measured by Polar   788   Polar Visible Aurora: Normal Solar Wind Conditions on November 13, 1999 over the North Pole
Visible aurora over the South Pole on May 11, 1999 as measured by Polar   787   Polar Visible Aurora: Low Solar Wind Conditions on May 11, 1999 over the South Pole
Visible aurora over the North Pole on May 11, 1999 as measured by Polar   786   Polar Visible Aurora: Low Solar Wind Conditions on May 11, 1999 over the North Pole
Visible aurora over the North Pole on April 17, 1999 as measured by Polar   785   Polar Visible Aurora: High Solar Wind Conditions on April 17, 1999 over the North Pole
A comparison of images of the aurora over the North Pole on May 11, 1999, when there was no solar wind, and November 13, 1999, during normal solar wind conditions.   784   Polar Visible Aurora: North Pole Comparison between May 11, 1999 and November 13, 1999 (Grid)
A comparison of images of the aurora over the North Pole on May 11, 1999, when there was no solar wind, and November 13, 1999, during normal solar wind conditions.   783   Polar Visible Aurora: North Pole Comparison between May 11, 1999 and November 13, 1999 (Continents)

TRMM-VIS
Movie   ID   Title
The cloud layer   2799   Typhoon Maemi, September 11, 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
This annotation zooms down to the South China Sea just as Typhoon Koni is causing severe weather problems.   2784   Typhoon Koni Hits South China Sea
Rain structure of Hurricane Claudette   2783   Hurricane Claudette Approached Texas July 15, 2003
The visualization zooms down to the storm and then shows the overall 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.   2661   Tropical Cyclone Zoe Devastates South Pacific Islands, December 29, 2002
Peel away the clouds to reveal the underlying rain structure.  The rain structure is depicted with 5 different isosurfaces.  The first isosurface is grey and depicts areas with 0.5 inches of rain per hour.  The second is light blue and reflects 1.0 inches of rain per hour.  The third is green and shows 1.7 inches of rain per hour.  The forth is yellow and represents 2.0 inches of rain per hour. The last isosurface is red and shows 2.2 inches or more of rain per hour.   2659   Tropical Cyclone Crystal on December 25, 2002
Peel away the clouds to reveal the storms structure.   2647   Tropical Cyclone Boura on November 17, 2002
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
This animation zooms down to Typhoon Phanfone just south of Japan.  The structure of the storm is revealed where yellow represents 0.5 inches of rain or more, green shows 1.0 inches of rain and red shows 2.0 inches or more.   2507   Powerful Typhoon Phanfone, August 15, 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

Viking-VIS
Movie   ID   Title
A flyby of the Martian surface, using topography and imagery from Mariner 9 and Viking   559   Mars


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