New survive Bi-ocular Animations of Two Oceans

NOAA's GOES-13 and GOES-15 climate satellites assemble 60 degrees apart in a preset orbit over the eastern and western U.S., correspondingly, given that forecasters with a look at the group of weather systems in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The GOES Project at the NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. publicized the formation of satellite animations of both GOES-13 and GOES-15 to show permanent views of both oceans, with conjoined images suggestive of binoculars.



NOAA's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites gather full disk images of the eastern and western sides of the Americas every 3 hours, given that 8 views per day of the clouds over the complete western hemisphere. Overlaid on color maps, the time-series of GOES cloud images give a review of the large-scale climate conditions.

Recently, Dennis Chester’s of the NASA GOES Project formed an algorithm that joint the full disk images from both GOES-13 and GOES-15 (or GOES-EAST and GOES-WEST) into a wide animation that proves two rounded images of the Earth and the Atlantic and Pacific oceans as if you were seeming with wide-set eyes.

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