Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission TRMM homepage

link to images showing HURRICANE FABIAN 4 SEP 2003
(CLICK TO ENLARGE)

Hurricane Fabian Eyes Bermuda

This Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM) satellite captured this spectacular overpass of Hurricane Fabian at 5:02 AM Atlantic Daylight Time on September 4, 2003. The majestic swirl of Fabian's clouds is rendered by the Visible and Infrared Scanner (VIRS) on board TRMM. The TRMM satellite has the ability to probe through the clouds, identifying areas of rainfall using its passive microwave sensor (TRMM Microwave Imager or TMI) and active microwave instrument called the Precipitation Radar (PR). The map of rain intensity across Fabian (reds are heaviest rains, on the order of several inches/hr; blues show widespread light rains) was obtained by splicing together the TMI (outer swath) and PR (inner swath) images.

This images shows that Fabian's rains appear highly asymmetric, with much of the rain concentrated to the northwest of center, in the general direction of the storm's trajectory. Meanwhile, the eyewall rains in the southeast sector are much weaker and poorly organized. This is consistent with weakening of the storm, which was down to 105 kts sustained at the time of the TRMM overpass.

See VERY LARGE [30.1 mb] QUICKTIME ANIMATION of 12DBZ RADAR SURFACE

See SMALLER [3.5 mb] QUICKTIME ANIMATION

See MEDIUM 3-D [.9 mb] MPEG ANIMATION

TRMM is a joint mission between NASA and the Japanese space agency NASDA.

NASA Home Page
NASDA Home Page
GSFC Home Page
Breaking News
Rainfall Measurements
Real Time Products
Introduction
Images and Movies
Publications
Data Products
Educational Resouces
Validation
Related Links
Contact Information
Privacy Statement
Image Policy
NASA home page



Current Web Curator:
Harold.F.Pierce@nasa.gov