This is how rain and snow travel across the globe
The "GMP sees globally, so you can start to track the hurricanes and cyclones and know which coastlines to evacuate," Gail Skofronick-Jackson, GPM project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, said during a NASA briefing today. Thanks to its network of satellites, GMP gathers global precipitation information every 30 minutes. For this reason, NASA says it can be used to develop rainfall accumulation maps. "For floods, if you know it's been raining with a very high rain rate... the emergency management can start to say 'this looks dangerous, let's evacuate people,'" she said.
The GMP system is only a year old, but it may soon help people in this manner. In the meantime, watching the weather go by is pretty fun. You can track precipitation in the US as it turns to snow in Canada, or watch rain move from West Africa to South America. It shows just how connected we all are. "The view from space has given us an ability to see the entire globe in multiple dimensions," Skofronick-Jackson said. "It has completely transformed our understanding of the Earth."
Via: theverge.com
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