How the weather images are acquired...
![]() |
Every 90 minutes a low
earth orbiter skims the atmosphere (Click on
the thumbnails to see larger images.) |
![]() |
The antenna used to receive the images at the Ojai Earth Station is at
left. It is called a turnstile,
because of its shape. The two bottom bars are reflectors, the
uppermost are active elements. Unlike most antennas, which aim
toward the horizon, this one looks upward. There are two sets because the signal from above is circularly polarized. Inside the plastic pipe is 300-ohm TV twin lead, cut to resonate at the satellite broadcast frequency of 137.5 MHz. The signal is amplified once before it is fed to a modified police scanner. |
|
The scanner has had its IF filter bandwidth modified from the
police frequency deviation of 7.5 kHz to the standard used by the
orbiters, 40 kHz. Audio from the scanner is then fed to a sound card in a PC, analyzed, and the image extracted. That image is then reprocessed as a .jpg file, and uploaded to this website. |
|
|
The image at left is the raw copy of what comes down. It is built
up gradually, as a slow scan, left-to-right, top-to-bottom, at one line per second.
The leftmost band is a gray scale spectrum, used for brightness
calibration. Then comes digital data about the status of the
onboard instruments, fuel, and other data such as locations of emergency distress transmitters. Then a band showing minute
markers to pinpoint the satellite's location.
The leftmost picture frame is visible light. Rightmost is an infra-red image. When inverted, this displays hotter objects as brighter. It works at night, and you can use it to determine the temperature of a lake, for example. . |
|
![]() |
If
the satellite is headed south to north, the images will appear to be
upside down.
Sometimes we can combine the two frames and use the data to artificially colorize the image. |
|
You can hear (but not use) the signal for yourself on any unmodified
scanner by tuning to 137.5 and being patient. Each satellite will
pass directly overhead twice daily.
The best shot of the day occurs with the sun directly overhead, around 11 AM, give or take an hour. As the two frames (visible and infra-red) are sent line by line, it makes a distinctive "tick-tock" sound. Images from
the latest generation of geostationary satellites contain much more
information, but are also much more difficult for a home user to capture or
interpret. |
Home
| Photos |
Resume
| Graphics | Media
| Accessories | Ojai
Server | Satellite |
Links
© 2003
Daly Road Graphics Last modified December 04, 2005