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Rachelle's Weather Blog

By Rachelle Oblack, About.com Guide to Weather

GOES Weather Satellite Launched

Sunday June 28, 2009
This stunning image is of the launch of the GOES weather satellite aboard a Delta IV rocket. The new satellite, temporarily called GOES-O, lifted off at 6:51 p.m. (EDT) on Saturday night from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The initial target date for the launch was on Friday, but a threat of a thunderstorm enacted the NASA thunderstorm rule for the launch. NASA contracted Boeing to build the satellite for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Each of the GOES satellites continuously provides observations of 60 percent of the Earth. The wealth of data available from the GOES satellites proves technology has come a long way since the grainy images of the world's first weather satellite, TIROS. NOAA has two operational GOES satellites hovering 22,300 miles above the equator – GOES-12, in the east, and GOES-11, in the west – each provide continuous observations of environmental conditions of North, Central and South America and surrounding oceans. While these two are operational, another GOES satellite, GOES-13, is in orbital storage and can be activated if one of the other satellites experiences trouble.

With the launch of the latest GOES satellite, NOAA will have another backup. Approximately 24 days after launch, Boeing Space and Intelligence Systems will turn engineering control over to NASA. About five months later, NASA will transfer operational control of GOES-14 to NOAA. The satellite will be checked out, stored in orbit and available for activation should one of the operational GOES satellites degrade or exhaust its fuel.

Photo Credit: NASA/Jack Pfaller

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