Jeff Foust of SpaceNews explains: «[NOAA] has usually relied on NASA for support developing and operating missions, including those funded by NOAA itself, such as
traditional weather satellites.
NOAA, though, has usually relied on NASA for support developing and operating missions, including those funded by NOAA itself, such as
traditional weather satellites.
Not exact matches
Eventually, Jenkins says, Saildrone could have enough drone boats to be able to predict the world's
weather with more precision than
traditional satellites — something that private companies in shipping, oil, and plenty of other industries would surely want.
Saildrone says that it could eventually have enough drone boats to predict the world's
weather with more precision than
traditional satellites — something that private companies in shipping, oil, and plenty of other industries would surely want.
To answer this question I looked at more than just the
traditional Hadley, NASA and NOAA datasets, but also the measurements of the lower troposphere processed by Remote Sensing Systems (RSS) and the University of Alabama - Huntsville (UAH) as well as the 5 major reanalysis datasets which incorporate station data, aircraft data,
satellite data, radiosonde data and meteorological
weather modeling.