SeaWinds/Oceans, Land, Polar Regions
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for a Full Resolution Image.
The SeaWinds scatterometer on the QuikSCAT satellite makes global radar measurements - day and night, in
clear sky and through clouds. The radar data over the oceans provide scientists and weather forecasters with
information on surface wind speed and direction. Scientists also use the radar measurements directly to learn
about changes in vegetation and ice extent over land and polar regions.
This false-color image is based entirely on SeaWinds measurements obtained over oceans, land, and polar
regions. Over the ocean, colors indicate wind speed with orange as the fastest wind speeds and blue as the
slowest. White streamlines indicate the wind direction. The ocean winds in this image were measured by SeaWinds
on September 20, 1999. The large storm in the Atlantic off the coast of Florida is Hurricane Gert. Tropical storm
Harvey is evident as a high wind region in the Gulf of Mexico, while farther west in the Pacific is tropical storm
Hilary. An extensive storm is also present in the South Atlantic Ocean near Antarctica.
The land image was made from four days of SeaWinds data with the aid of a resolution enhancement
algorithm developed by Dr. David Long at Brigham Young University. The lightest green areas correspond to the
highest radar backscatter. Note the bright Amazon and Congo rainforests compared to the dark Sahara desert.
The Amazon River is visible as a dark line running horizontally though the bright South American rain forest.
Cities appear as bright spots on the images, especially in the U.S. and Europe.
The image of Greenland and the north polar ice cap was generated from data acquired by SeaWinds on a
single day. In the polar region portion of the image, white corresponds to the largest radar return, while purple is
the lowest. The variations in color in Greenland and the polar ice cap reveal information about the ice and snow
conditions present.
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) manages the SeaWinds/Quikscat mission for NASA's Earth Science
Enterprise, which is a long-term research and technology program designed to examine Earth's land, oceans,
atmosphere, ice and life as a total integrated system. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology,
Pasadena, CA.
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