Satellite
Posted by Chris in Tampa on 9/28/2022, 1:35 am
Floaters:



NOAA:
https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES/floater.php?stormid=AL092022
Also contains "Mesoscale loop" linked from that page.

To get to loops you can control, with each band an option, go to "HU Ian - Channel Loops" tab above imagery loop you can't control.

Band 13, which I look at most (imagery every 10 minutes):
https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES/floater_band.php?stormid=AL092022&band=13&length=24

If you like for the NOAA imagery not to move, here is Southeast satellite, showing most of Ian as of posting (imagery every 5 minutes):
https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES/sector_band.php?sat=G16&sector=se&band=13&length=12



Colorado State (imagery every 5 minutes):
https://rammb-data.cira.colostate.edu/tc_realtime/storm.asp?storm_identifier=al092022

Contains various other data too.



Mesoscale Floaters:



A note about mesoscale floaters: Make sure they have current data. Some might change the link and if you visit the old link you'll see older data. If the mesoscale floater has changed positions over the storm, you may need to find the updated link to get data. That applies to NOAA. Not sure about SLIDER.

There are two mesoscale floaters. They reposition depending on where they want either 30 second or 1 minute imagery. Keep that in mind. A link that is always the same will eventually link to something else.



NOAA (imagery every minute):
https://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/GOES/meso_index.php

Then choose from the top of the page the one that is active. (look at time, in UTC, which is four hours ahead of EDT) The link to a particular mesoscale floater for a storm changes. The latest link is linked from the NOAA link at the top page containing the floater for Ian. But this is the main mesoscale floater page. A storm name does not appear on the page.



Colorado State SLIDER, interactive satellite imagery (every 30 seconds; you can zoom out):

https://rammb-slider.cira.colostate.edu/?sat=goes-16&sec=mesoscale_01&x=878&y=776&z=1&angle=0&im=12&ts=1&st=0&et=0&speed=130&motion=loop&maps%5Bborders%5D=white&lat=0&p%5B0%5D=band_13&opacity%5B0%5D=1&pause=20220928051555&slider=-1&hide_controls=0&mouse_draw=0&follow_feature=0&follow_hide=0&s=rammb-slider&draw_color=FFD700&draw_width=6



College of DuPage (imagery every 30 seconds):

https://weather.cod.edu/satrad/?parms=meso-meso1-13-24-0-100-1&checked=map&colorbar=data



NASA (imagery every minute):

https://weather.msfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/sportPublishData.pl?dataset=goeseastabimesoscale1&product=10p35um



RealEarth from University of Wisconsin-Madison (imagery every minute):

https://realearth.ssec.wisc.edu/?products=GOES-16SandwichMESO1.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-TC.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND16.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND15.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND14.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND13-GRAD.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND13.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND12.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND11.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND10-VAPR.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND10.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND09-VAPR.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND09.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND08-VAPR.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND08.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND07-FIRE.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND07.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND06.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND05.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND04.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND03.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND02.-90,G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND01.-90&timeproduct=G16-ABI-MESO1-BAND01&center=25,-70&zoom=3&basemap=bw&labels=line&view=leaflet

Imagery loaded after a certain point will contain a watermark unless you pay.



Wider satellite views:



Colorado State SLIDER, interactive satellite imagery (every 5 minutes; you can zoom out):

https://rammb-slider.cira.colostate.edu/?sat=goes-16&sec=conus&x=5658&y=5394&z=3&angle=0&im=12&ts=1&st=0&et=0&speed=130&motion=loop&maps%5Bborders%5D=white&lat=0&p%5B0%5D=band_13&opacity%5B0%5D=1&pause=0&slider=-1&hide_controls=0&mouse_draw=0&follow_feature=0&follow_hide=0&s=rammb-slider&draw_color=FFD700&draw_width=6



Other sites:



Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies (CIMSS) - University of Wisconsin-Madison:
https://tropic.ssec.wisc.edu/
Has NHC track that you can add to imagery, but the imagery is not like that found on other sites. Not as large or as detailed.



US Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) Tropical Cyclone Page:
https://www.nrlmry.navy.mil/TC.html
Click storm name if Ian is not on front page. This site is not that easy to navigate. I also with they described some of the advanced satellite products better.
54
In this thread:
11pm EDT Tue on Ian: 120mph; 952mb; NNE at 10mph; life-threatening storm surge, catastrophic winds & flooding expected - cypresstx, 9/27/2022, 11:16 pm
< Return to the front page of the: message board | monthly archive this page is in
Post A Reply
This thread has been archived and can no longer receive replies.