The short video, 'For Good Measure' explains why scientists turn to satellites to get a worldwide view of rainfall.
Click here to view the full featured story.
|
04/30/2013 - 1:21pm
|
04/30/2013 - 1:22pm
|
03/07/2013 - 11:32am
|
03/05/2013 - 5:22pm
|
|
03/05/2013 - 5:25pm
|
03/05/2013 - 5:29pm
|
03/05/2013 - 2:04pm
|
03/05/2013 - 2:09pm
|
Your browser is not able to display this Flash video. Click here to download the latest version of Flash.
The short video, 'For Good Measure' explains why scientists turn to satellites to get a worldwide view of rainfall.
Click here to view the full featured story.
Your browser is not able to display this Flash video. Click here to download the latest version of Flash.
As anyone who has ever been caught in a sudden and unexpected downpour knows, gaps still exist in our knowledge about the behavior and movement of precipitation, clouds and storms. An upcoming satellite mission from NASA and the Japanese Space Agency aims to fill in those gaps both in coverage and in scientists' understanding of precipitation.
Your browser is not able to display this Flash video. Click here to download the latest version of Flash.
The GPM Core Observatory completed thermal vacuum testing at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. on Jan. 16, 2013. After twelve days to carefully remove the testing equipment, stow the High Gain Antenna and GPM Microwave Imager, and lift the spacecraft out of the thermal vacuum test chamber, the spacecraft was moved back to the clean room on Jan. 28.
Your browser is not able to display this Flash video. Click here to download the latest version of Flash.
This animation shows the launch and deployment of the GPM Core Observatory. GPM is scheduled to launch in 2014 on an H-IIA rocket in Japan.
Your browser is not able to display this Flash video. Click here to download the latest version of Flash.
Alan Stahler of community radio KVMR in Nevada City, California interviews NASA Goddard's Owen Kelley about hurricane physics, how TRMM measures precipitation, and the TRMM overflight of Hurricane Sandy one day before landfall. The 38-minute-long interview aired on the anniversary of the TRMM satellite's launch.
Host: Alan Stahler of the science program "Soundings"
Interviewee: Owen Kelley, Research Scientist, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt MD
Broadcast: Noon PST, Tuesday, 27 Nov 2012 (the day of the 15th anniversary of the launch of the TRMM satellite)