
Why does this happen? Is this a satellite's way of cooling down after it takes several images? Or is this just natural and unalterable?
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Calamity wrote:Re: Why does rapid scan tend to skip (or jump)?
It was clearly visible on Isabel, as seen here:
Why does this happen? Is this a satellite's way of cooling down after it takes several images? Or is this just natural and unalterable?
Margie wrote:Calamity wrote:Re: Why does rapid scan tend to skip (or jump)?
It was clearly visible on Isabel, as seen here:
Why does this happen? Is this a satellite's way of cooling down after it takes several images? Or is this just natural and unalterable?
Did you try doing some web searches on this topic? There may be a schedule or something for the various scans, including SRSO, or some other reason it can't scan continuously beyond so many minutes.
senorpepr wrote:Here's the story (or as much of it as I know off hand)...
Whenever the satellite is in rapid fire (5-15 minutes between images) or super rapid fire (1 minute images), the resolution is increased. Because of this increase in resolution, the "viewing window" is decreased.
Now... if a hurricane, like Isabel, is out in the Atlantic, by turning the satellite to super rapid, the satellite zooms into the system and no longer provides imagery for the US. That is why you see a few images in both super and regular rapid fire, followed by a regular image at :15 and :45 past the hour... to get the needed satellite data for the eastern half of the US.
senorpepr wrote:Whenever the satellite is in rapid fire (5-15 minutes between images) or super rapid fire (1 minute images), the resolution is increased. Because of this increase in resolution, the "viewing window" is decreased.
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