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The Earth was ready for its close-up this year. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites, or GOES-16 satellites, captured several ...
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NOAA's GOES-19 satellite releases new coronagraph data to publicNear real-time preliminary data from NOAA's first Compact Coronagraph (CCOR-1), a powerful solar telescope onboard the GOES-19 satellite, are now publicly accessible. GOES-19, launched in June ...
Incredible satellite imagery from NOAA's GOES-18 shows never-ending parade of storms that hit California for 6 straight days.
“This video contains visible (band 2, opens new tab) imagery from the GOES-16 weather satellite, opens new tab. It spans the three-hour period from 14:04 to 17:00 UTC on 10/06/24,” the caption ...
NASA focuses 5 new missions on gathering data about climate change 05:10. A powerful SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket boosted a hurricane-hunting GOES weather satellite into orbit Tuesday, the final ...
A CAD rendering of the CCOR instrument on the GOES-U satellite. (Image credit: NOAA) "It will be the first near real time operational coronagraph that we have access to.
The GOES-19 satellite was built by Lockheed Martin and cover a vast area that includes the U.S. West Coast, Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico, Central America, and the Pacific Ocean.
A new weather satellite will monitor both Earth and space-based weather. The GOES-U mission will gauge storm severity on Earth and track solar storms.
On Wednesday, GOES-18, a satellite launched by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in March, went into operation and produced the striking images of the storm off the West Coast.
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