The images below are created from data that is archived and distributed by the GES DISC DAAC.
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please contact help@daac.gsfc.nasa.gov.
AIRS calibrated Vis/NIR radiances. This hurricane Isabel image is a false color composite using 0.71-0.92 µm, 0.58-0.68 µm, and 0.40-0.44 µm bands. The nadir pixel resolution is 2.3 km.
The Texas Florida Underflights (TEFLUN) field experiments were designed to provide validation measurements for TRMM (Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission) and for the enhancement of precipitation algorithms.
True color image of Hurricane Charley as observed by MODIS onboard the Terra satellite on August 13, 2004.
The large-scale atmospheric circulation indicated by the strip of clouds across the Gulf of Mexico pushed
Charley north-northeastward across the Florida Peninsula.
As Hurricane Isabel intensified and weakened on its way to the East Coast, the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) observed Isabel many times. The TRMM Precipitation Radar (PR) is the only instrument in space that can provide detailed three-dimensional rainfall measurements.
The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), which is related to the proportion of photosynthetically absorbed radiation, is calculated from atmospherically corrected reflectances from the visible and near infrared AVHRR channels.
SeaWiFS image of the east coast of the United States, acquired on September 18, 2003, as Hurricane Isabel was about to make landfall on the Outer Banks of North Carolina.
Global ten-day normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) maps generated from radiance data measured by the AVHRR instrument flown on the satellites NOAA 7,9,11,14 (July 1981 - September 2001).
SeaWiFS false-color image of chlorophyll concentration data for the east coast of the United States. In the upper right area of this image, the boundary between higher (yellow and green) and lower (blue) chlorophyll concentrations marks the position of the Gulf Stream.
TOMS-EP measures the second largest ozone hole! The Antarctic ozone hole reached its maximum on September 24, 2003, slightly larger than the North American continent, but smaller than the largest ever recorded, on September 10, 2000.