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  • Atmospheric Winds | NASA Earthdata
    Data visualization is a powerful tool for analysis, trend and pattern recognition, and communication Our resources help you find world-class data visualizations to complement and enhance your research We also have tools and tutorials to help you translate atmospheric winds data into compelling visuals
  • Surface Winds | NASA Earthdata
    By studying these winds, scientists can learn more about ocean processes and improve predictions of extreme weather NASA’s available data products useful to the study of surface winds include average wind speed and direction, sea level pressure, and surface stress
  • The Power of a Brazilian Wind | NASA Earthdata
    Kempton said, “The ideal wind-speed zone has winds that are high enough to produce energy but without strong storms that pose a threat to the installation ” Second, offshore turbine foundations must be on relatively shallow coastal shelves; the deepest installed turbine is currently rated for 50 meters (164 feet) in depth
  • Wind Speed | NASA Earthdata
    NASA data shows wind speed at the ocean and land surface as well as in vertical profiles through the atmosphere
  • Monsoons | NASA Earthdata
    Subtropical air entering the ITCZ rises, cools, and forms the bands of clouds that produce heavy rainstorms that are the hallmark of monsoons Seasonal changes in the strength of sunlight and the flow of Earth's Trade Winds shift where the ITCZ sits and monsoons form north and south of the equator
  • Hurricanes | NASA Earthdata
    Hurricanes are a rotating, tropical cyclone with a low pressure center (the eye) and 1-min average surface (10 m) winds in excess of 32 m s−1 (64 knots) in the Western Hemisphere This area encompasses the North Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, and the eastern and central North Pacific east of the international date line
  • Atmospheric Rivers | NASA Earthdata
    Conditions that contribute to their formation usually include high humidity levels, strong low-level winds, and a moist neutral atmospheric profile They typically occur in the extratropical North Pacific Atlantic, southeastern Pacific, and South Atlantic oceans, often making landfall on the west coasts of North and South America
  • El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) | NASA Earthdata
    El Niño and La Niña are two opposing climate patterns that break these normal conditions Scientists call these phenomena the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) cycle During El Niño, trade winds weaken Warm water is pushed back east, toward the west coast of the Americas Definition source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • SeaWinds | NASA Earthdata
    The SeaWinds instrument, which flew on NASA's Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) satellite and NASA JAXA's ADEOS-II, was a specialized microwave radar that measured near-surface wind velocity and cloud cover over Earth's oceans
  • Tropical Cyclones | NASA Earthdata
    Earth observation data are vital in planning for and dealing with the many hazards from tropical cyclones, such as storm surge, flooding, extreme winds, tornadoes, and lightning Over the past 50 years, tropical cyclones have killed more than 779,000 people and caused more than $1 4 trillion in economic losses worldwide, according to the WMO





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