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Lori Perkins



Movie   ID   Roles   Title
Hurricane Bill forms in the Atlantic.  TRMM's Microwave Imager and Precipitation Radar instruments revealed that Hurricane Bill has bands of heavy rainfall.   3626 Animator
  Hurricane Bill on August 17, 2009 at 1133 UTC
This animation shows the NDVI time series in the wheat producing regions in Australia for the growing season of two drought years and one normal year. The preview image is from the 2006 drought on Oct 18, 2006.   3598 Animator
  Monitoring Agricultural Production from Space
This animation shows where the world's food is grown versus where the world's food is consumed.  The movie starts with global croplands and then fades to the countries that produce over 80% of the world's wheat, grain, and cereal. It then overlays the world's population density and then fades to show the countries that are projected to double and triple their population by 2050.   3601 Animator
  Global Agricultural Monitoring
Fires around the world from Jan 1 through Dec 31, 2007.   3597 Animator
  Fire Observations - As the World Turns
This data visualization of five-year global temperature differences from 1880 to 2008 was designed to be shown on the Science On A Sphere. Dark blue areas show regions where the temperature was cooler then the average temperature. Red areas show regions where the temperature was warmer then the average. This particular image show the global average from 2004 to 2008.   3596 Animator
  Five-Year Average Global Temperature Anomalies from 1880 to 2008 for Science on a Sphere
Return to P.I.G.: The Long Wait for Science   10412 Animator
  Return to P.I.G.
This guided tour of the area surrounding McMurdo Station in Antarctica uses the Landsat Image Mosaic of Antarctica (LIMA). It's a great way to experience the frozen continent without any risk of frostbite.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='LIMA_wVO_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10416 Animator
  Guided Tour of LIMA Flyover
This sequence shows Arctic sea ice thickness derived from winter and fall campaigns from the ICESat satellite. Sea ice grows extent grows in the summer and shrinks in the winter. While the sea ice extent might look similar from year to year this thickness data shows dramatic thinning especially near the North Pole (shown in dark blue). This image was generated with data acquired between Feb 17 - Mar 21, 2008.   3593 Animator
  Fall and Winter Arctic Sea Ice Thickness Declining Rapidly
This sequence shows Arctic sea ice thickness derived from fall campaigns from the ICESat satellite. While the sea ice extent might look similar from year to year this thickness data shows dramatic thinning especially near the North Pole (shown in dark blue). This image was generated with data acquired between Oct 4 - Oct 19, 2008.   3592 Animator
  Fall Arctic Sea Ice Thickness Declining Rapidly
This sequence shows Arctic sea ice thickness derived from winter campaigns from the ICESat satellite. While the sea ice extent might look similar from year to year this thickness data shows dramatic thinning especially near the North Pole (shown in dark blue). This image was generated with data acquired between Feb 17 - Mar 21, 2008.   3589 Animator
  Winter Arctic Sea Ice Thickness Declining Rapidly
Designed exclusively for playback on spherical projections surfaces, FROZEN introduces mainstream audiences to the cryosphere--places on Earth where the temperatures don't rise above water's freezing point. The following trailer showcases some of the visual themes contained in the movie and points to the film's main website.<p><p>This film has been prepared exclusively for playback on spherical projections systems. It will not appear in its proper format on a traditional computer or television screen. If you are interested in dowloading the complete final movie file for spherical playback, please visit : <p><a href=   10403 Animator
  FROZEN: A Spherical Movie About the Cryosphere
This image is the high resolution image of Antarctica shown using the Landsat Image Mosaic of Antarctica data.   3588 Animator
  Landsat Image Mosaic of Antarctica Graphic
The mass changes of the Gulf of Alaska glaciers are computed from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) inter-satellite rate data from April 2003 through September 2007. Using space-borne gravity measurements to assess glacier mass balance NASA scientists determine mass variations along the Gulf of Alaska, an area apanning 18,919 square miles. Areas of deep blue like the areas around Glacier Bay and the Yakutat Icefield represent significant mass loss where inland areas of dark gray represent slight mass gains.   3522 Animator
  Recent Glacier Mass Changes in the Gulf of Alaska Region from GRACE Mascon Solutions
Annual Arctic Sea Ice Minimum from 1979 to 2008.   3563 Animator
  Sea Ice Yearly Minimum with Graph Overlay 1979-2008
This visualization is a time-series of the global distribution and variation of the concentration of mid-tropospheric carbon dioxide observed by the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) on the NASA Aqua spacecraft. For comparison, it is overlain by a graph of the seasonal variation and interannual increase of carbon dioxide observed at the Mauna Loa, Hawaii observatory.   3562 Animator
  Aqua/AIRS Carbon Dioxide with Mauna Loa Carbon Dioxide Overlaid
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 Animator
  Hurricane Ike Attacks the Gulf Coast on September 12, 2008
Hurricane Ike strengthens in the Gulf. TRMM observed this 17 km tower.   3559 Animator
  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 Animator
  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 Animator
  Hurricane Ike Slams Cuba on September 8, 2008
In the 1950's, the South African government decided to produce gasoline and chemicals from their plentiful natural supply of coal. The South African Coal liquidation plant also exports carbon dioxide. This image shows AIRS carbon dioxide data from July 2003.   3554 Animator
  Aqua/AIRS Sees Belt of Carbon Dioxide in Southern Hemisphere
This visualization shows Aqua/AIRS mid-tropospheric carbon dioxide from July 2003. Low concentrations, 360 ppm, are shown in blue and high concentrations, 385 ppm, are shown in red. In the southern hemisphere, a belt of mid-tropospheric air containing enhanced concentrations of carbon dioxide emerged between 30 and 40 degrees south latitude. This belt had not previously been seen in any chemistry transport model.   3555 Animator
  Aqua/AIRS Sees Belt of Carbon Dioxide in Southern Hemisphere with Winds
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 Animator
  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 Animator
  Tropical Storm Hanna's Towering Thunderclouds
This animation shows the very dangerous Hurricane Gustav on August 31, 2008.   3545 Animator
  Hurricane Gustav on August 31, 2008
NASA's Terra satellite captures this view of Hurricane Gustav's eye. At this time the storm had weakened from a category 4 to a category 3 with winds of 115 mph and a pressure reading of 960.   3546 Animator
  Examining Hurricane Gustav's Cloud Structure
Hurricane Gustav weakened as it stalled over Haiti. The storm has already killed 22 people in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.   3543 Animator
  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 Animator
  Hurricane Gustav Slams Haiti
This image shows the 3 regions in North Africa: The Sahara, the Sahel, and the Sudan. The Sahel, a word derived from the Arabic ’sahil’ meaning shore, is a semi-arid belt of barren, sandy and rock-strewn land which stretches 3,860km across the breadth of the African continent and marks the physical and cultural divide between the continent’s more fertile south (the Sudan Region) and Saharan desert north.   3539 Animator
  Blue Marble Next Generation Images from Terra/MODIS
This is the Pine Island Glacier which is a broad glacier flowing WNW along the south side of the Hudson Mountains into Pine Island Bay, Amundsen Sea.   3538 Animator
  Landsat Image Mosaic of Antarctica Flyover of Pine Island Glacier
This image compares the size of the continental United States to the size of Antarctica.   3540 Animator
  Compare the Size of Antarctica to the Continental United States
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 Animator
  Tropical Storm Edouard
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