Ron's Log's photos with the keyword: radar

National Radar Map - Oct 29, 2012

29 Oct 2012 368
Screen grab from the National Weather Service during Hurricane Sandy.

Burning Man Satellite August 31 (partial)

26 Jul 2012 3646
It looks like a night image, but it's actually a radar image with false colors. This is part of an image from five images on this site .

Saline Valley Radar Image with note

13 Dec 2009 584
Identifying the location of the springs.

Saline Valley Radar Image

13 Dec 2009 617
From NASA . This is a three-dimensional perspective view of Saline Valley, about 30 km (19 miles) east of the town of Independence, California created by combining two spaceborne radar images using a technique known as interferometry. Visualizations like this one are helpful to scientists because they clarify the relationships of the different types of surfaces detected by the radar and the shapes of the topographic features such as mountains and valleys. The view is looking southwest across Saline Valley. The high peaks in the background are the Inyo Mountains, which rise more than 3,000 meters (10,000 feet) above the valley floor. The dark blue patch near the center of the image is an area of sand dunes. The brighter patches to the left of the dunes are the dry, salty lake beds of Saline Valley. The brown and orange areas are deposits of boulders, gravel and sand known as alluvial fans. The image was constructed by overlaying a color composite radar image on top of a digital elevation map. The radar image was taken by the Spaceborne Imaging Radar-C/X-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SIR-C/X-SAR) on board the space shuttle Endeavour in October 1994. The digital elevation map was produced using radar interferometry, a process in which radar data are acquired on different passes of the space shuttle. The two data passes are compared to obtain elevation information. The elevation data were derived from a 1,500-km-long (930- mile) digital topographic map processed at JPL. Radar image data are draped over the topography to provide the color with the following assignments: red is L-band vertically transmitted, vertically received; green is C-band vertically transmitted, vetically received; and blue is the ratio of C- band vertically transmitted, vertically received to L-band vertically transmitted, vertically received. This image is centered near 36.8 degrees north latitude and 117.7 degrees west longitude. No vertical exaggeration factor has been applied to the data. SIR-C/X-SAR, a joint mission of the German, Italian, and the United States space agencies, is part of NASA's Mission to Planet Earth. Sensor: Space Shuttle/SIR-C/X-SAR.

TPN-12 Radar Surveillance Precision Radar Set (846…

TPN-12 Radar Surveillance Precision Radar Set (312…

TPN-12 Radar Surveillance Precision Radar Set (312…