Monday, August 24, 2009

Google Earth Weather Tools

Some cool hurricane/tropical tracking, and other weather tools that run in Google Earth. - HLG


http://www.gearthblog.com/blog/archives/2007/08/best_storm_tracking_and_weather_tools_for_google_earth.html


August 15, 2007
Best Storm Tracking and Weather Tools for Google Earth
We now have two named tropical storms in the Atlantic (Dean and Erin), a tropical storm in the East Pacific (Flossie) - near Hawaii, and a typhoon in the west Pacific (Sepat) . One of Google Earth's most powerful features is the ability to pull in real-time information from other sites and overlay the information for visualization (thanks to the network link). Weather data is one of my favorite applications in Google Earth of this ability. Imagine pulling in the latest satellite photos, radar animations, hurricane tracking, live web cams on the ground, sea surface temperature analysis, etc. Well, you can do all that with the set of the very best weather tools for Google Earth which GEB has bundled together into this: the weather and storm tracking tools collection . Simply drag this network link into your Places folder to keep it handy. It won't take up space until you turn it on. It first loads several folders of weather tools you can explore. You may want to turn only one layer on at a time - these layers weren't designed to all be turned on at once. Although, some of the layers are complimentary (like current lightning strikes with clouds or storms turned on).

Right now the collection includes: two global hurricane tracking tools, global cloud maps, current global lightning strikes animation (from GuiWeather.com, severe weather warning data and radar data from NOAA for the US, TopicWatch by Paul Seabury, a large collection of weather image overlays from TropicalAtlantic, weather observations for the US from WeatherBonk, a real-time day/night viewing tool, and the global annual lightning flash rate map from NASA. Turn on the Hurricanes - Live Positions link to see the latest storms around the world. You will see the storms' tracks, forecasted paths, current positions, and the red dots are nearby web cams. The position of the storms, when a hurricane, will show it's storm strength (level 1, 2, etc.).

These tools were put together by a variety of people (some are weather professionals, others are weather hobbyists). But, these are the best. GEB will continue to add more storm and weather tools to the network link periodically, but if you save this network link, you will automatically see them added.

Here are more details about the weather tools in the collection:

Hurricanes - Live positions
Current Global Lightning Animation from GuiWeather.com
Global Cloud Map
NOAA Severe Weather
Weather Bonk - For Google Maps, but GE file available
Real-Time Day and Night Earth
Annual Lightning Flash Rate

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