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- Info
TRMM
The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), a joint mission of NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, was launched in 1997 to study rainfall for weather and climate research. After over 17 years of productive data gathering, the instruments on TRMM were turned off on April 8, 2015. The spacecraft re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere on June 15, 2015, at 11:55 p.m. EDT, over the South Indian Ocean.
The multi-satellite 3B42*/TMPA product will continue to be produced through mid-2017 - learn more about the transition from 3B42* to IMERG.
Basic Information
Launch Date
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November 27, 1997 |
Orbit
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Circular, non-sun-synchronous, with an inclination of 35 degrees to the Equator. |
Orbit Altitude
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350 km (1997/11/27 - 2001/08/08)
403 km (2001/08/24 - July 2014)
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Altitude Change
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During the period of 2001/8/7 to 2001/8/14, the average operating altitude changed from 350 km to 403 km (referred to also as TRMM Boost). |
Instruments
Below are overview descriptions of the instruments on the TRMM satellite:
Visible Infrared Radiometer (VIRS)
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The VIRS (of NOAA AVHRR heritage) is a five-channel, cross-track scanning radiometer operating at 0.63, 1.6, 3.75, 10.8, and 12 um, which provides high resolution observations on cloud coverage, cloud type, and cloud top temperatures. |
TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI)
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The TMI (of DMSP SSM/I heritage) is a multichannel passive microwave radiometer operating at five frequencies: 10.65, 19.35, 37.0, and 85.5 GHz at dual polarization and 22.235 GHz at single polarization. The TMI provides information on the integrated column precipitation content, cloud liquid water, cloud ice, rain intensity, and rainfall types (e.g., stratiform or convective). |
Precipitation Radar (PR)
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The PR, the first of its kind in space, is an electronically scanning radar, operating at 13.8 GHz that measures the 3-D rainfall distribution over both land and ocean, and define the layer depth of the precipitation. |
Further information on these instruments may be found on the TRMM Instruments Web page.
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