TRMM Satellite Shows Possible Storm Development

The TRMM satellite had another revealing pass over the Mozambique Channel and Madagascar on 27 February 2012 at 2011 UTC. This area is being monitored for significant tropical cyclone development. TRMM's Microwave Imager (TMI) and Precipitation Radar (PR) data were used in the rainfall analysis on the upper left. This analysis shows that very intense storms were being produced by a cyclonic circulation off northwestern Mozambique. These storms were dropping rainfall at a rate of over 50mm/hr (~2 inches) in the Mozambique Channel between Mozambique and Madagascar. The 3-D TRMM PR image on the

More Flooding Rainfall In Madagascar

A weak tropical cyclone locally called Irina caused flooding over northern Madagascar less than two weeks after deadly flooding by Tropical Cyclone Giovanna . The lastest tropical cyclone didn't have very strong winds when it passed over the coastal city of Vohemar on Madagascar's northeastern coast but street flooding was reported. The rainfall analysis above was made at the Goddard Space Flight Center using data from a near-real time Multi-satellite Precipitation Analysis (TMPA). TRMM-based near-real time Multi-satellite Precipitation Analysis (TMPA) data are used to monitor rainfall over

Saving the Best for Last - Prelude to a Storm

Joe Munchak is a scientist at Goddard Space Flight Center who specializes in remote sensing of snow. This week he writes from the air in the DC-8 out of Bangor, Maine. Last time I wrote for the GCPEx blog, I was stationed in Barrie, Ontario with the ground team. I’ve since switched hats to that of CoSMIR Instrument Scientist. CoSMIR (Conically Scanning Millimeter Imaging Radiometer) is one of two instruments on the NASA DC-8 which is based out of Bangor, Maine – my home for the past ten days. With CoSMIR and the Airborne Precipitation Radar-2 (APR2), the DC-8 is acting as a simulator for the