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Jeff Halverson



Movie   ID   Roles   Title
Hurricane Ophelia at 1648 Zulu.
Peer under the clouds to see the rain structure fueling the storm.   3244 Scientist
  Hurricane Ophelia from TRMM: September 11, 2005 1648 Zulu
Look under the clouds of Hurricane Ophelia to see the rain that fuels the storm.  Areas of blue indicate regions where 0.5 inches of rain per hour were recorded.   3245 Scientist
  Hurricane Ophelia from TRMM: September 11, 2005 1826 Zulu
Sea surface temperature on Aug 29, 2005   3225 Scientist
  Sea Surface Temperature from June 1, 2005 to August 29, 2005
Sea surface temperature with clouds overlaid showing the first half of the 2005 hurricane season  (no storm tracks)   3226 Scientist
  Sea Surface Temperature, Clouds, and Tropical Depression/Storm/Hurricane Tracks from June 1, 2005 to August 29, 2005
In this video, we explore the latest ways the space agency studies hurricanes and point to the future of this dynamic and exciting field of research.   3228 Scientist
  Hurricanes
Sea surface temperature   3257 Scientist
  Sea Surface Temperature from June 1, 2005 to September 18, 2005
Hurricane Katrina rain accumulation for the period Aug 23 through 29   3221 Scientist
  Hurricane Katrina Rain Accumulation
Sea surface temperature showing Hurricane Katrina's cold water wake in blues (08-29-2005)   3222 Scientist
  Hurricane Katrina Sea Surface Temperature
GOES-12 infrared imagery over TRMM rainfall accumulation for Hurricane Katrina, from August 23, 2005 to August 30, 2005.   3239 Scientist
  Hurricane Katrina Rain Accumulation (WMS)
GOES-12 infrared imagery over AMSR-E sea surface temperature for Hurricane Katrina, from August 23, 2005 to August 30, 2005.   3240 Scientist
  Hurricane Katrina Sea Surface Temperature (WMS)
NASA's TRMM spacecraft peers beneath the clouds of Hurricane Katrina to see the rainfall that powers the storm.
  3218 Scientist
  Hurricane Katrina from TRMM: August 28, 2005
Hurricane Katrina moves slowly toward Florida and dumps 6 to 10 inches of accumulated rainfall over the region.  In this animation, the amount of rainfall can be seen through color. blue is 0.25 inches per hour.  Green is 0.5 inches per hour.  Yellow is 1 inch per hour and red is 2 or more inches per hour.   3214 Scientist
  Hurricane Katrina from TRMM: August 25, 2005
Hurricane Katrina strikes the southeastern Louisiana and the northern gulf coast as a category 4 hurricane. Look under the clouds to see the rainfall that powers the storm.   3219 Scientist
  Hurricane Katrina from TRMM: August 29, 2005
Portrait image of Hurricane Emily as it makes landfall in Mexico.    3215 Scientist
  Hurricane Emily: July 20, 2005
This is the view of Hurricane Dennis scene by the TRMM spacecraft on July 6, 2005 at 2i30Z.   3190 Scientist
  Hurricane Dennis on July 6, 2005
TRMM provides this view of Hurricane Ivan on September 16, 2004, as its eye makes landfall. TRMM lets us see through the clouds. Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3172 Scientist
  Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure with Cloud Overlay on September 16, 2004
This image shows the global lightning flash
rate density for the entire observing period. The data pixels
are 0.5deg on a side (720x360 pixels globally). This single
image is equivalent to the final frame of animation #3143, but
at a spatial resolution that is 5 times
better.   3144 Scientist
  Global Lightning Flash Rate Density (WMS)
This animation shows an accumulation of daily
lightning climatology values for a typical year. That is, the
first frame shows the number of flashes per square kilometer
that occurred on a typical January 1 during the multi-year data
collection period, the second frame shows the total of Jan 1 and
Jan 2 flashes, the third frame shows Jan 1 through Jan 3, and so
on until the last frame (#365) which shows the total
accumulation for a typical year. As the year progresses, more
and more of the Earth experiences lightning, and hard-hit areas
experience more strikes. The most intense activity is in central
Africa. Areas where no lightning was measured are transparent,
letting the background image show through. The data pixels are
2.5deg on a side (144x72 pixels globally), and each frame has
been magnified to 720x360 pixels for greater
clarity.   3143 Scientist
  Global Lightning Accumulation (WMS)
This images shows the hot towers of Hurricane Frances.  The image cuts away the back half of the storm's cloud layer.  The yellow to red stucture is the rain structure of the storm. It has also been cutaway to reveal the eye of the storm.   3145 Scientist
  Hurricane Frances Rain Towers
Look under the clouds to see the rain that fuels the storm.   3134 Scientist
  Hurricane Frances Structure September 1, 2004
Accumulated rainfall from September 6-20,2003.  This image is derived from data from the TRMM Multisatellite Precipitation Analysis Product .   3131 Scientist
  Hurricane Isabel 2003 Rain Accumulation
January 7, 2005 .  This image shows 27 hours of accumulated rainfall.  The accumulation is shown in colors ranging from green (less than 50 mm of rain) through red (200 mm or more).   3083 Scientist
  NASA Satellite Reveals Heavy Rainfall Patterns in California
This animation shows the cumulative rainfall caused primarily by hurricanes during September 2004.   3034 Scientist
  Accumulated Rainfall during Hurricanes Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne, 2004 (WMS)
The source of power that feeds a hurricane is its rainfall.  The TRMM spacecraft allows us to look beneath the clouds to see the structure of the rain.   3023 Scientist
  TRMM Tropical Microwave Imager (TMI) Sees the Power of Hurricane Jeanne on September 25, 2004
The TRMM spacecraft allows us to see beneath the clouds from Hurricane Jeanne to see the rain which powers the storm.   3025 Scientist
  TRMM Tropical Microwave Imager (TMI) view of Hurricane Jeanne on September 27, 2004
The TRMM spacecraft allows us to see beneath the clouds from Hurricane Jeanne to see the rain which powers the storm.   3024 Scientist
  TRMM Tropical Microwave Imager (TMI) Sees the Power of Hurricane Jeanne on September 26, 2004
September 23, 2004 The blue isosurface represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3016 Scientist
  TRMM Precipiation Radar Observes Rain Structure of Hurricane Jeanne on September 23, 2004
 TRMM provides this view of Hurricane Ivan on September 16, 2004, as its eye makes landfall.  TRMM lets us see through the clouds. Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3011 Scientist
  Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure seen by TRMM on September 16, 2004
Hurricane Ivan on September 15, 2004.  The rain structure is taken by TRMMs Precipitation Radar (PR). Precipitation Radar has a horizontal resolution at the ground of about 2.5 miles (four kilometers) and a swath width of 137 miles (220 kilometers). One of its most important features will be its ability to provide vertical profiles of the rain and snow from the surface up to a height of about 12 miles (20 kilometers). It looks underneath of the storms clouds to reveal the underlying rain structure. Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.  High vertical bands on the outside of the storm indicated that Hurricane Ivan was very likely to spawn tornados in Florida and Georgia.   3009 Scientist
  TRMM Looks at the Rain Fueling Hurricane Ivan on September 15, 2004
Hurricane Ivan on September 13, 2004.  Blue represents areas with at least 0.25 inches of rain per hour.   3008 Scientist
  Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure on September 13, 2004

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