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Scott Braun



Movie   ID   Roles   Title
Tropical Storm Ida threatens the Gulf Coast on November 9, 2009.  This image shows the light rain (0.25 inches) in blue, heavier rain (25 mm or 1 inch per hour) in yellow and extremely heavy rain in red(50 mm or 2 inches per hour).   3660 Scientist
  Tropical Storm Ida observed on November 9, 2009 at 1218 UTC
Hurricane Bill forms in the Atlantic.  TRMM's Microwave Imager and Precipitation Radar instruments revealed that Hurricane Bill has bands of heavy rainfall.   3626 Scientist
  Hurricane Bill on August 17, 2009 at 1133 UTC
Hurricane Ike threatens the entire Gulf Coast on September 12, 2008. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour. Yellow is 1 inch of rain per hour and red is 2 inches of rain per hour.   3560 Scientist
  Hurricane Ike Attacks the Gulf Coast on September 12, 2008
Hurricane Ike strengthens in the Gulf. TRMM observed this 17 km tower.   3559 Scientist
  Hurricane Ike on September 10, 2008 at 1745 UTC
NASA's TRMM satellite peers beneath the clouds to capture this view of Hurricane Ike. The 12 km towers in the outer band, shown in red, lead scientists to believe that the inner eye is eroding as the outer bands are becoming better defined. This could limit rapid intensity development in the very near term.   3558 Scientist
  Hurricane Ike Strengthens in the Gulf of Mexico on September 10, 2008
Hurricane Ike slams into Cuba at 7:04 EDT on September 8, 2008.   3557 Scientist
  Hurricane Ike Slams Cuba on September 8, 2008
Notice the rainbands that power the storm. Hurricane force winds extended outward up to 45 miles from the center of this storm and tropical storm force winds extended outward up to 140 miles.   3553 Scientist
  Hurricane Ike on September 4, 2008
TRMM's Precipitation Radar (PR) instrument observed this 17 kilometer tower in the eatern eyewall as Tropical Storm Hanna was intensifying to a category 1 hurricane on September 1, 2008.   3550 Scientist
  Tropical Storm Hanna's Towering Thunderclouds
NASA's Terra satellite captures this view of Hurricane Gustav's eye. At this time the storm had weakened from a category 4 to a category 3 with winds of 115 mph and a pressure reading of 960.   3546 Scientist
  Examining Hurricane Gustav's Cloud Structure
This animation shows the very dangerous Hurricane Gustav on August 31, 2008.   3545 Scientist
  Hurricane Gustav on August 31, 2008
Hurricane Gustav weakened as it stalled over Haiti. The storm has already killed 22 people in Haiti and the Dominican Republic.   3543 Scientist
  Hurricane Gustav on August 27, 2008
Hurricane Gustav slams into Haiti. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour.   3542 Scientist
  Hurricane Gustav Slams Haiti
This animation shows the progression of warm waters slowly filling the Gulf of Mexico (shown in yellow, orange, and red). This natural annual warming contributes to the possible formation of hurricanes in the Gulf. SST data shown here ranges from January 1 to the present.   3532 Scientist
  Current Sea Surface Temperatures Rising in the Gulf of Mexico
Tropical Storm Eduoard on August 5, 2008. Peer through the clouds to see the storms structure. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour.   3536 Scientist
  Tropical Storm Edouard
Tropical Storm Fay stalled over Eastern Florida dumping over 24 inches of rain. The blue region represents areas where the storm is dumping at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour and the green region is raining 0.5 inches of inches per hour.   3541 Scientist
  Tropical Storm Fay Inundates Florida
This animation of global precipitation cycles through the climatology data for the twelve months of the year and then repeats the cycle twice.   3461 Scientist
  NASA Scientists Research Global Precipitation
This short film provides a quick take on the awe-inspiring research and imagery coming out of the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.  See the Earth, as only NASA can.   10191 Scientist
  Destination Earth
Sea surface temperature in the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic on 2007-01-01.   3489 Scientist
  2007 Sea Surface Temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico
This animation shows TRMM's rainfall data every 3 hours for the 2005 year.
Hurricane Katrina is clearly visible in the Gulf of Mexico.   3462 Scientist
  Global TRMM Rainmap 2005
Typhoon Dianmu (Helen) intensified from a 70 kt/80 mph typhoon to a 155 kt/180 mph super typhoon on June 17, 2004. It is one of only  nine typhoons since 1990 to reach that intensity.   3463 Scientist
  Global TRMM Rainmap 2004
Hurricane Dean hits the Yucatan Peninsula on August 21, 2007.   3448 Scientist
  Hurricane Dean on August 21, 2007
Hurricane Dean attacks  Jamaica and threatens the Yucatan Peninsula.  The TRMM satellite peers under the clouds to see the rain that powers this intense storm.   3447 Scientist
  Hurricane Dean on August 19, 2007
Composite still   3413 Scientist
  Towers in the Tempest
This animation shows AMSR-E sea surface temperature and MODIS seasonal landcover from the beginning of 2005 to December, 2006.   3390 Scientist
  AMSR-E Sea Surface Temperature
This is the most recent Sea Surface Temperature (SST) data available for the Gulf of Mexico region and the Atlantic Coast region.  This data is used by scientists for studying hurricanes.  For more information please <a href='http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a003300/a003397/index.html'> click here.</a>   3376 Scientist
  Current Tropical Sea Surface Temperatures
NASA scientists are using high resolution models to try to understand the rainfall structure observed by the TRMM satellite.   3377 Scientist
  A Hurricane Model
NASA researchers studied several elements during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
The top left window shows sea surface temperature and clouds.  The bottom left window shows wind analysis model data.   The top right window shows Rainfall Accumulation.  The bottom right window shows Hurricane Katrina's Hot Towers.   3362 Scientist
  NASA Scientists Research Tropical Cyclones
SST data for the Gulf of Mexico and along the Atlantic coast on October 31, 2006.   3357 Scientist
  2006 Sea Surface Temperatures Rising in the Gulf of Mexico
Current SST data for the Gulf of Mexico and along the Atlantic coast.   3397 Scientist
  2008 Sea Surface Surface Temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico


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