1944: With the help of aircraft, researchers
capture radar images of a cyclone's eye and spiral bands for the first time.
Not exact matches
IT»S A BIRD... This
radar image of the Chinese Tiangong - 1 space station was recently
captured by scientists at Germany's Fraunhofer FHR research institute.
Wurman's mobile -
radar trucks have been the single largest source of data over the past decade, including the remarkable
capture in 1999 of
images of the most powerful wind ever logged: 301 miles per hour.
The synthetic aperture
radar developed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory mounted on NASA's C - 20A research aircraft
captured this
image of Peru's Ubinas volcano on April 14, 2014, during its Latin American research mission.
Wurman — aided by his wife, Ling Chan, and another meteorologist — maneuvered the DOW, with its full - size
radar equipment, close to the outer ring of a tornado rotating at about 170 miles per hour and
captured three - dimensional
images of these powerful winds.
The US military has built a
radar - imaging device that can see through walls to
capture 3D
images of people and objects beyond.