The Washington Post reports on Tuesday, the United States launched “its latest and greatest weather satellite, which will provide constant monitoring over the Western Hemisphere and help track fires, hurricanes, lightning, smoke plumes, coastal fog, landslides, atmospheric rivers, dust storms and more.” Some instruments will also “stare at the sun, providing data on incoming space weather that could disrupt technology on Earth.” The NOAA GOES-T launched “at 4:38 p.m. Eastern from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida.” The satellite is expected “to be fully operational by early 2023 and will oversee the U.S. West, Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico, Central America and Pacific Ocean.” Pam Sullivan, system program director for the GOES-R Series Program, said in a virtual news conference, “NOAA’s geostationary satellites provide the only continuous coverage of weather and hazardous environmental conditions in the Western Hemisphere, protecting the lives and properties of the 1 billion people who live and work there.”
Full Story (Washington Post)