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These compelling images are from Hurricane Bonnie showing a cumulonimbus
storm cloud, towering like a sky scraper, 59,000 feet (18 kilometres) into the
sky from the eyewall. Thes images were obtained on Saturday, 22 August 1998,
by the worlds first spaceboarne rain RADAR aboard the Tropical Rainfall
Measuring Mission (TRMM), a joint U.S.-Japanese mission. Launched November
27, 1997, the TRMM spacecraft contines to provide exciting new insight into
cloud systems over tropical oceans. By comparison, the highest mountain in the world, Mt. Everest, is
29,000 feet (9 kilometres) and the average commercial jet flies at barely
one-half the height of Bonnies cloud tops. Scientists believe that towering cloud structures like this are probably
precursors to hurricane intensification. This was the situation with Bonnie
whose central pressure dropped from 977 millibars to 957 millibars in the
subsequent 24 hours. TRMM is a joint NASA and NASDA mission that was launched November 27, 1997
from the Japanese Space Center, Tanegashima, Japan.
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Cost / Copyright:
No cost
Please give credit to NASA GSFC Scientific Visualization Studio.
DLESE Catalog ID:
NASA-SVS-000211
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Related resources:
This resource has a thumbnail image at
'A low angle view of the 18 km Hurricane Bonnie cloud tower'
Resource contact / Creator / Publisher:
Author:
Greg Shirah NASA GSFC Scientific Visualization Studio
Principal Investigator:
Chris Kummerow NASA/GSFC |