In my daytime job, I work with amazing researchers and meteorologists, like Owen Kelley and Marshall Shepherd. Marshall has been a hero of mine for over a decade and he's now at the Univ. of Georgia. This week, they both talked about NASA data that I've been posting (and writing about) on the NASA Hurricane page when they did this great interview with NPR's Science Friday!
TRMM
looked into the eye of Sandy the day before it made landfall and saw
something surprising. Satellites also took snapshots of Sandy. J.
Marshall Shepherd, president-elect of the American Meteorological
Society (and former NASA Scientist) and the director of the Atmospheric
Sciences Program at the University of Georgia, explains some of Sandy's
unusual features.
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