Sinlaku (Northwest Pacific)
NASA Satellites Provide Triple Coverage on Tropical Storm Sinlaku
Tropical Storm Sinlaku made landfall in east-central Vietnam bringing
some moderate to heavy rainfall with it. NASA and the Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency's TRMM and GPM satellites analyzed the rainfall rates
occurring in Sinlaku before it made landfall while NASA's Terra
satellite spotted the storm as it came ashore in Vietnam.
Tropical Storm Sinlaku formed on November 26, 2014 over the
southeastern Philippines. As a tropical depression Sinlaku caused
flooding in areas of the Visayas and Mindanao. The storm then moved west
and crossed the South China Sea where it headed to Vietnam for a final
landfall.
The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission or TRMM satellite and the
Global Precipitation Measurement or GPM core satellites viewed Sinlaku
after it had strengthened into a tropical storm over the South China
Sea.
Both TRMM and GPM provided information about the rate in which rain
was falling within the storm. Rainfall derived from TRMM Microwave
Imager (TMI) data was collected when the satellite flew over on November
28, 2014 at 0716 UTC (2:16 a.m. EST). The GPM Microwave Imager (GMI)
measurements occurred a little over six hours later at 1326 UTC (8:26
a.m. EST). The GMI found rain falling at a rate of over 82 mm/3.2 inches
per hour in powerful thunderstorms north of Sinlaku's center of
circulation.
At NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, a 3-D view
of Sinlaku's precipitation structure was made using data from the Ku
band on GPM's dual frequency radar instrument (DPR). DPR showed that
some thunderstorms were reaching heights of 16.41 km (about 10.2 miles).
The energy released by these towering storms often signals
intensification in tropical cyclones. The Joint Typhoon Warning Center
(JTWC)
predicted that Sinlaku would intensify and reach close to typhoon force
winds of 60 knots (69 mph) before hitting Vietnam on November 30, 2014.
On Nov. 29 at 03:30 UTC (Nov. 28 at 10:30 p.m. EST), the MODIS
(Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) instrument aboard NASA's
Terra satellite took a visible image of Tropical Storm Sinlaku as it
began making landfall in Vietnam. At that time the western quadrant of
the storm was over the coast near Phu Yen.
On Nov. 28, the GPM satellite saw rain falling at a rate of over 82
mm/3.2 inches per hour north of Sinlaku's center of circulation where
thunderstorms were as high as 16.41 km (10.2 miles).
The TRMM satellite flew over Sinlaku on November 28, 2014 at 0716 UTC and measured moderate rainfall.
On Nov. 29 at 03:30 UTC, the MODIS instrument aboard NASA's Terra
satellite took this visible image of Tropical Storm Sinlaku making
landfall in Vietnam.
Sinlaku made landfall in the Phu Yen Province and affected a large area
from the Quang Ngai to Khanh Hoa Provinces. The storm moved inland and
weakened into a depression on Nov. 30.
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