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Rund 36 Tausend Kilometer über dem Äquator: Dieser Wettersatellit wurde unter anderem zur Warnung vor tropischen Wirbelstürmen eingesetzt. Er nahm verschiedene Positionen zwischen 60 und 75 Grad westlicher Länge ein. Auf dem Bild steht er etwa über dem südamerikanischen Land Ecuador. © Allan Kung => Zurück zum Artikel


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  • Rund 36 Tausend Kilometer über dem Äquator: Dieser Wettersatellit wurde unter anderem zur Warnung vor tropischen Wirbelstürmen eingesetzt. Er nahm verschiedene Positionen zwischen 60 und 75 Grad westlicher Länge ein. Auf dem Bild steht er etwa über dem südamerikanischen Land Ecuador.
  • Originalbeschriftung: The GOES program is a key element of National Weather Service (NWS) operations providing continuous satellite monitoring of the Earth’s environment for weather forecasting, storm warning, and meteorological research. The GOES program is composed of two geostationary satellites monitoring the east and west coasts of the United States and two satellites in storage orbits for use in the case of outages. Mission duration: July 2001 - August 2013
  • Wikipedia: GOES-12, known as GOES-M before becoming operational, is an American weather satellite, which is part of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite system. It was launched on July 23, 2001,[3] and spent its first 21 months in space as an on-orbit spare. From April 2003, the satellite took over the GOES-East position, providing coverage of the eastern half of the continental United States. In April 2010, GOES-East operations were taken over by GOES-13, and GOES-12 transitioned to the GOES-South location to devote time to South American imagery.[4] It remained at this post until it was decommissioned on August 16, 2013[3] and subsequently boosted to a graveyard orbit.

Source


  • Created: Probably before the year 2010
  • Author: Allan Kung
  • Credit: NASA

License


Public Domain: All NASA-images are in the Public Domain unless otherwise noted.

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Originalseite


  • Das Bild ist Teil eines online-Lexikons.
  • Rhetos Lernlexikon Mathematik, Aachen: