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NEWS RELEASE: 2006-083 June 6, 2006
First Images From NASA'S Cloudsat Have Scientists Sky-High
The first images from NASA's new CloudSat satellite are already revealing never-before-seen 3-D details about clouds.
"CloudSat's radar performed flawlessly, and although the data are still very preliminary, it provided breathtaking new views of the weather on our planet," said Dr. Graeme Stephens, CloudSat principal investigator and a professor at
"We have now begun continuous radar operations, and we look forward to releasing our first validated data to the science community within nine months, hopefully sooner," he added.
Just 30 seconds after radar activation, CloudSat obtained its first image - a slice of the atmosphere from top to bottom showing a warm storm front over the North Sea in the North
The remaining orbits of the test recorded unique observations of other weather types on a scale never seen before. The radar obtained first-time observations of clouds and snow storms over the Antarctic. Until now, clouds have been hard to observe in polar regions using satellite remote sensing, particularly during the polar night season. The CloudSat observations also provided new views of sloping, frontal clouds and thunderstorms over
"We're seeing the atmosphere as we've never seen it before," said Deborah Vane, CloudSat deputy principal investigator at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "We're no longer looking at clouds like images on a flat piece of paper, but instead we're peering into the clouds and seeing their layered complexity."
The first-ever millimeter wavelength radar, CloudSat's Cloud-Profiling Radar is more than 1,000 times more sensitive than typical weather radar. It can observe clouds and precipitation in a way never before possible, distinguishing between cloud particles and precipitation. Its measurements are expected to offer new insights into how fresh water is created from water vapor and how much of this water falls to the surface as rain and snow.
CloudSat was launched April 28 from Vandenberg Air Force Base,
CloudSat is managed by JPL, which developed the radar instrument with hardware contributions from the Canadian Space Agency.
For more information on CloudSat on the Web, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/cloudsat
JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology.
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