NASA’s Global Tour of Precipitation in Ultra HD (4K)
Precipitation (falling rain and snow) is our fresh water reservoir in the sky and is fundamental to life on Earth. This video shows the most detailed and worldwide view of rain and snowfall ever created and uses satellite measurements from the Global Precipitation Measurement Core Observatory, or GPM, a joint mission between NASA and the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Tracking precipitation from space with satellites provides information of where, when, and how much it rains and snows anywhere in the world and gives insight into the behavior of our weather, climate, and ecological systems. This video is an abridged 2-D version of a Science On a Sphere production, a film that is projected onto a spherical screen developed by NOAA. On this platform, audiences can view the film from any side of the sphere and can see any part of Earth. The film concludes with near real-time global precipitation data from GPM, which is provided to Science On a Sphere roughly six hours after the observation. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Joy Ng Music credit: ‘Tides’ by Ben Niblett and Jon Cotton, ‘Developing Over Time’ by Ben Niblett and Jon Cotton from the KillerTracks catalog.
Tags
Comments
Leave a Comment
Comments are loading... If you don't see any, be the first to comment!
Related Videos
NASA Explores Earth’s Connections
NASA Goddard
Five Years of GPM Storms
NASA Goddard
NASA Remasters Nearly 20 Years of Global Rain
NASA Goddard
NASA | The Data Downpour
NASA Goddard
NASA | First Global Rainfall and Snowfall Map from New Mission
NASA Goddard
NASA | Scanning a Snow Storm
NASA Goddard
NASA | For Good Measure
NASA Goddard
NASA | Water for Tea: Part I
NASA Goddard
NASA | GPM: The Fresh(water) Connection
NASA Goddard
NASA | Our Wet Wide World
NASA Goddard
