File:Dorian 2019-09-01 1641Z.jpg

Original file (2,900 × 3,500 pixels, file size: 13.52 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

Description
English: This true-color image of Hurricane Dorian was captured on September 1, 2019, at 12:41 P.M. AST (16:41 UTC), by the Advanced Baseline Imager (ABI) instrument flying aboard NOAA's GOES 16 satellite. Dorian was a destructive and extremely powerful hurricane during the slightly above average 2019 Atlantic hurricane season. Dorian would go on and stall over the Bahamas on the day this image was taken into the next day. It would also make landfall in North Carolina and Atlantic Canada days later. When this was captured, Dorian was making landfall in Grand Abaco Island, Bahamas at its peak intensity as a catastrophic Category 5 major hurricane, with winds of 185 mph (298 km/h) (160 knots) on the 1-min Saffir-Simpson scale and had a minimum central pressure of 910 mbar (26.9 inHg).
Date
Source AWS S3 Explorer
Author ABI imagery from NOAA'S GOES-16 Satellite

Licensing

Public domain
This image is in the public domain because it contains materials that originally came from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, taken or made as part of an employee's official duties.

العربية  čeština  Deutsch  Zazaki  English  español  eesti  suomi  français  hrvatski  magyar  italiano  日本語  한국어  македонски  മലയാളം  Plattdüütsch  Nederlands  polski  português  română  русский  sicilianu  slovenščina  Türkçe  Tiếng Việt  简体中文  繁體中文  +/−

Captions

Hurricane Dorian making landfall in the Abaco Islands while at peak intensity on September 1, 2019

Items portrayed in this file

depicts

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current15:44, 30 September 2024Thumbnail for version as of 15:44, 30 September 20242,900 × 3,500 (13.52 MB)TheWxResearcherUploaded a work by ABI imagery from NOAA'S GOES-16 Satellite from [https://registry.opendata.aws/collab/noaa/ AWS S3 Explorer] with UploadWizard

The following 59 pages use this file:

Global file usage

Metadata