Below is one of the most comprehensive full-disk images of Earth ever captured and the government of United States is currently downloading a new version of it every other15 minutes. This extraordinary view captured and is about 4 times more clear and comprehensive than any full-disk image of the earth ever taken before. This image was captured by a recently launched National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather satellite, called GOES-16 (and formerly GOES-R). GOES-R is short for Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite.
NOAA/NASA |
This satellite is a part of the newest fleet of Earth-monitoring satellites. The director of NOAA's National Weather Service, Louis Uccellini, said in a press statement that the view is "much more than a pretty picture ... it is the future of weather observations and forecasting." GOES-16 was launched on 19 November 2016, and it is at geostationary orbit orbits, nearly 22,300 miles (35,900 kilometers) above Earth. Here are some crops of the full-disk image.
Below is North America with a huge, rainy, snowy weather system stirring across the United States:
NOAA/NASA |
The Caribbean, including Florida, and part of Central America:
NOAA/NASA |
The western United States:
NOAA/NASA |
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