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Lori Perkins



Movie   ID   Roles   Title
Anatomy of Hurricane Isabel when it was far out in the Atlantic   3252 Animator
  Anatomy of Hurricane Isabel
Energy-releasing deep convective clouds (to 16 km) in the eyewall of Hurricane Katrina on August 28 occurred while the storm was intensifying to a category 5 classification.    3253 Animator
  Hurricane Katrina Hot Towers
Deep convective 15 km clouds (in red) can be seen in the eyewall of Tropical Storm Wilma on October 17, 2005.    3281 Animator
  Hurricane Wilma's Hot Towers seen by TRMM 10/17/2005 at 1754Z
TRMM captured 2 very deep Hot Towers in the eyewall of Tropical Storm Wilma.  These towers measured 15-16 km high.   3289 Animator
  TRMM captures Hot Towers Igniting Hurricane Wilma's Heat Engine
Hurricane Ophelia at 1648 Zulu.
Peer under the clouds to see the rain structure fueling the storm.   3244 Animator
  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 Animator
  Hurricane Ophelia from TRMM: September 11, 2005 1826 Zulu
Sea surface temperature with clouds overlaid showing the first half of the 2005 hurricane season  (no storm tracks)   3226 Animator
  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 Animator
  Hurricanes
Hurricane Katrina rain accumulation for the period Aug 23 through 29   3221 Animator
  Hurricane Katrina Rain Accumulation
GOES-12 infrared imagery over TRMM rainfall accumulation for Hurricane Katrina, from August 23, 2005 to August 30, 2005.   3239 Animator
  Hurricane Katrina Rain Accumulation (WMS)
The title screen from the video includes footage of the 2004 hurricane season in Florida.   3220 Animator
  Behold, A Whirlwind Came: The Science of Tracking Hurricanes
NASA's TRMM spacecraft peers beneath the clouds of Hurricane Katrina to see the rainfall that powers the storm.
  3218 Animator
  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 Animator
  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 Animator
  Hurricane Katrina from TRMM: August 29, 2005
Portrait image of Hurricane Emily as it makes landfall in Mexico.    3215 Animator
  Hurricane Emily: July 20, 2005
NASA has monitored changes in Antarctic ozone levels since 1979.  In September 2002, the Antarctic ozone hole split into two parts.   3264 Animator
  Smithsonian Exhibit: Antarctic Ozone Sequence 1979 through 2004
July 10, 2005 16:15 (UTC) In this image, with winds of 217 kilometers per hour (135 mph), Hurricane Dennis was a powerful Category 4 storm just hours away from making landfall.  The eye of the storm was about 90 kilometers (55 miles) south, southeast of Pensacola, Florida, and the storm was moving northwest at about 29 kilometers per hour (18 mph).   3196 Animator
  Hurricane Dennis
This is the view of Hurricane Dennis scene by the TRMM spacecraft on July 6, 2005 at 2i30Z.   3190 Animator
  Hurricane Dennis on July 6, 2005
Compare Hurricane Jeanne's actual versus predicted track.   3184 Animator
  fvGCM and Hurricane Jeanne Track
VIDEO WITH MUSIC AND CAPTIONS   3181 Animator
  A Tour of the Cryosphere
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 Animator
  Hurricane Ivan Rainfall Structure with Cloud Overlay on September 16, 2004
This animation shows levels of sulfur dioxide in the atmosphere after the volcanic eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in the Philippines.   3169 Animator
  Sulfur Dioxide from the Mount Pinatubo Volcanic Eruption, 1991 (WMS)
X-ray emissions from Earth's aurora.   3170 Animator
  X-Ray Images of the North Polar Region (WMS)
This data was scanned on January 24, 2004 from 20:01:25 UTC till January 24, 2004 20:22:19 UTC.  The blue line near the surface day/night terminator is where the terminator is 100 km from the surface.   3165 Animator
  X-ray Images of the North Polar Region from the Chandra HRC-I Instrument
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 Animator
  Hurricane Frances Rain Towers
 Hurricane Isabel images from Sep 18 15:55 UTC, Sep 17 15:09 UTC, Sep 16 17:40 UTC, Sep 15 15:30 UTC, Sep 14 17:55 UTC, Sep 12 15:00 UTC, Sep 11 14:15 UTC, Sep 10 16:40 UTC, and Sep 08 13:45 UTC.   3139 Animator
  Hurricane Isabel 2003 Progression Images
Look under the clouds to see the rain that fuels the storm.   3134 Animator
  Hurricane Frances Structure September 1, 2004
The TOMS instrument on the Earth Probe spacecraft has recorded daily ozone values from July 25, 1996.   Areas of red show the highest concentration of ozone measured in dobson units, DU.  Areas of purple indicate the lowest concentration, commonly known as the ozone hole. The top plot shows the amount of ozone concentration measured in DU.  The bottom plot shows the spatial area in Millions of Kilometers, MKm, of the ozone hole.   3136 Animator
  Antarctic Ozone Sequence 1996 through 2004
NASA has been recording ozone values since 1979.  This animation shows high concentration of ozone in red.  It shows low concentration of ozone, also known as the ozone hole, in purple.  Notice that the Ozone Hole did not develop until the mid 1980s.   3137 Animator
  Antarctic Ozone Sequence 1996 through 2004, Data Dropouts Removed
Breakoff of iceberg B-21 from the Pine Island glacier shown in imagery acquired by MISR   3127 Animator
  Pine Island Glacier Calving (WMS)

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