Text Size

Related Links


For more information contact:

Rani D.Chohan
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, MD 20771
phone: 301.286.2483

Viewable Images

September 03, 2003 Fabian site

September 04, 2003 Fabian site

Story Archives

The Top Story Archive listing can be found by clicking on this link.

All stories found on a Top Story page or the front page of this site have been archived from most to least current on this page.

For a list of recent press releases, click here.

September 05, 2003- (date of web publication)

Hurricane Fabian's Arrival Imminent

Residents of Bermuda brace for a direct impact from Hurricane Fabian. Meanwhile, scientists use space-based tools to help assess the hurricane's impact on Bermuda as well as the East Coast.

 

TRMM sees Hurricane Fabian

Image 1

Credit: NASDA/NASA

Click here for high resolution image

LOOKING INSIDE FABIAN

The eye of a hurricane may be the calm of the storm, but it also houses the heat that fuels the strength of its fury. NASA and NASDA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) satellite looked inside Fabian and showed scientists the engine that is driving the storm, giving them an idea of the intensity and distribution of rainfall. The world's first and only spaceborne rain radar allows scientists to create 3-D views of precipitation, height of the rain column and warmth of the core inside powerful hurricanes. Red color indicates rain rates in excess of 2 inches per hour. This visualization is from Sept. 4, 2003.

LURKING OFF THE COAST

 

Image 2

Credit: NASA/Orbimage

Click herefor high resolution image/Click here for animation

The wide-angle lens of the Sea-viewing Wide-Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) instrument on the Orbview-2 satellite captured this picture of Fabian Sept. 4, 2003, near Bermuda but not too far from the United States' East Coast. SeaWiFS monitors the health of the world's oceans by studying color.

Back to Top