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NOAA OFFERS IMPROVED ACCESS TO SATELLITE IMAGES OF THE GULF OF MEXICO
NOAA's CoastWatch program, which maps the coastal oceans daily, relocated a satellite antenna and installed enhanced hardware and software to ensure unobstructed near real-time access to high-resolution images of sea-surface temperatures. Images available from this location in Miami will cover the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean, northern South America and Central America, and the entire Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean. The installation of the hardware and software was done by the SeaSpace Corporation of San Diego under contract with NOAA. "Daily sea surface temperature products will be available from the CoastWatch Caribbean Regional Node Web site within hours of acquisition," said Kent Hughes, manager of the CoastWatch program in Suitland, Md. "This information is used by a variety of peoplemeteorologists, fisheries scientists, environmental managers, and commercial and recreational fishermen. The improvements we've made means that they can routinely use these products to accurately detect and track ocean features." The satellite data also are used by various NOAA agencies to support severe weather forecasting, fisheries research and management, and regional ocean and coastal science projects. Imagery will also be produced in coastal areas both before and after hurricane passage to assist in evaluating the impact of hurricanes at landfall. Future use could include studying wild fires, volcanoes and volcanic ash clouds. The antenna and software were
installed at NOAA's Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological
Laboratory (AOML) in
Miami, where scientists are studying hurricanes, ocean current
and temperature structures, ocean/atmosphere chemical exchanges,
and the coastal ocean. CoastWatch data will be used to supplement
data collected by research ships and aircraft, volunteer observing
ships, radar, acoustics, drifting buoys, and other types of instrumentation
as well as numerical and statistical models. Support for NOAA CoastWatch and the establishment of the project in Miami comes from NOAA's Ocean Remote Sensing Program managed in the National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service's Office of Research and Applications/Ocean Research and Applications Division. NOAA's mission is to describe
and predict changes in the Earth's environment and to conserve
and manage wisely the nation's coastal and marine resources.
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