Visitwallpapers.com


Login
Gallery : www.visitwallpapers.com Keyword Album: orbit Universe_119
Advanced Search
View Slideshow

Keyword Album: orbit

1. nasa_244 ... 48. Universe_115 49. nasa_141 50. nasa_146 51. Universe_119 52. nasa_152 53. nasa_153 54. Universe_122 ... 91. china_820
View Slideshow

Keyword Album: orbit

1. nasa_244 ... 48. Universe_115 49. nasa_141 50. nasa_146 51. Universe_119 52. nasa_152 53. nasa_153 54. Universe_122 ... 91. china_820

Universe_119

Space satellite orbiting the Earth. 3d rendering

(CNN) Whether it's wildfires that sweep across the West Coast, storms rolling in from the Pacific Ocean, or dense fog that blankets the Pacific Northwest, a new weather satellite will be able to track them all.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will launch GOES-T, the third in its series of advanced geostationary weather satellites, on March 1 from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Once the satellite is in orbit, it will be renamed GOES-18 and monitor weather that impacts the western United States, Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico, Central America and the Pacific Ocean.

The satellite will provide our most sophisticated and sharpest look yet at what Earth's Western Hemisphere looks like from 22,236 miles (35,785 kilometers) above the planet.

GOES-T is equipped with a suite of instruments that can provide measurements of the atmosphere, map lightning in real time and send back stunning ultra high-definition images. Its continuous collection of data will improve weather forecasting on Earth.

Together with the GOES-16 satellite, which launched in 2016, the two will actively monitor more than half the globe, spanning from the west coast of Africa to New Zealand.

Date: 02/04/2022
Size:
Full size: 2423x1440
nextnasa_152lastchina_820
nasa_244first nasa_146previous
Universe_119
nextnasa_152lastchina_820
nasa_244first nasa_146previous