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Launch of Atlas 5!
The fifth Lockheed Martin Atlas 5 rocket blasts off to deploy the Inmarsat 4-F1 mobile communications spacecraft into orbit. (2min 35sec file)
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Extended launch movie
An extended length clip follows the Atlas 5 launch from T-minus 1 minute through ignition of the Centaur upper stage and jettison of the nose cone. (6min 43sec file)
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Onboard camera
An onboard video camera mounted to the Atlas 5 rocket's first stage captures this view of the spent solid-fuel boosters separating.
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Press site view
This view of the Atlas 5 launch was recorded from the Kennedy Space Center Press Site. (1min 27sec file)
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Next Delta 4 rolls out
The Boeing Delta 4 rocket to launch the next GOES geostationary U.S. weather satellite is rolled to Cape Canaveral's pad 37B for its spring blastoff. (2min 08sec file)
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Rocket goes vertical
The pad erector arm lifts the Delta 4 rocket upright, standing the vehicle onto the launch table. (4min 00sec file)
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Checking their ride
The STS-114 return-to-flight space shuttle astronauts inspect Discovery's thermal tiles and wing leading edge panels during the Crew Equipment Interface Test activities at Kennedy Space Center. (2min 26sec file)
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In the payload bay
The astronauts don coveralls and go into space shuttle Discovery's payload bay for further examinations during the Crew Equipment Interface Test in the orbiter hangar. (1min 25sec file)
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Shuttle simulation
A long mission simulation is underway to rehearse the launch of space shuttle Discovery, the uncovering of impact damage and the decision-making process of the flight controllers and management team. (14min 31sec file)

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Space rendezvous
After a two-day journey from Baikonur Cosmodrome, the Russian Progress 17P mission and International Space Station rendezvous in Earth orbit. Cameras on both craft provide scenes in this highlights movie. (4min 02sec file)
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Station flyaround
The Progress vehicle performs an automated flyaround of the International Space Station to align with the docking port. (3min 42sec file)
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ISS cargo ship docking
The Russian Progress M-52 resupply ship docks to the International Space Station as seen by the nose-mounted camera on the delivery freighter. (1min 30sec file)
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A tale of two El Ninos
NASA/JPL NEWS RELEASE
Posted: March 12, 2005

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times..." The same event can have dramatically different outcomes. For some, an El Nino means a welcome respite from bitter winter weather. For others, it can bring lashing rains and devastating floods.

All El Ninos don't run the same course either. Though the El Nino of 2002-03 affected climate around the world, it was much milder than the unusually large El Nino of 1997-98. What made one so much stronger than the other?

University of Maryland researcher Eric Hackert and three colleagues at the university's Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center took a close look at these two El Ninos to find out. Using satellite data of ocean temperature and sea-surface height along with computer models, they analyzed the two events to determine how they were alike and, more importantly, how they were different. One of the things they discovered was that a particular kind of wave helped make one El Nino much stronger and longer lasting than the other.

Hackert and his colleagues first studied how the two events began to see if something in their initial states might have foreshadowed the difference in their ultimate intensity. "In many respects they started the same," says Hackert. "With these initial conditions, the prediction for both of these scenarios would have been for mild events."

The striking differences between the two El Ninos became evident after the winds, what scientists call forcing, came into play. Winds drive ocean currents and excite waves. In an El Nino, a breakdown in the easterly (east to west) trade wind system spawns two different kinds of waves: Kelvin waves and Rossby waves. Kelvin waves travel from west to east along the equator. Rossby waves move in the opposite direction from east to west on either side of the equator. These waves create a change in ocean circulation.

When Hackert and his colleagues dissected ocean height satellite data to isolate the individual effects of the Kelvin and Rossby waves, they began to see differences in how the two El Ninos developed.

They found that the Kelvin wave component for the two El Ninos was similar at first but then strengthened for the 1997 El Nino and weakened for the 2002 El Nino. Even more striking was the influence of the Rossby waves. They had little effect on the development of the 2002 El Nino but made a large contribution to the strength and duration of the 1997 El Nino.

"Rossby waves alone contributed up to half of the sea surface temperature signal in the central Pacific during the key period of the build-up of the 1997 event and served to sustain the warm temperatures during the spring of 1998 in the far eastern Pacific," says Hackert. "One-third of the total sea level signal‹the seesaw effect with sea level down in west and up in the east--is accounted for by Rossby waves."

"Our study is the first time that anyone has actually broken the components into Kelvin and Rossby waves and done data assimilation to try to separate the role of the two," says Hackert. "It is an example of how satellite data in combination with numerical ocean models can be used to investigate theories on how an El Nino develops." For their study, Hackert and his colleagues used sea-surface temperature data from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellites and sea-surface height measurements from the Topex/Poseiden and Jason satellites, joint missions of NASA and the French space agency.

"This was just one step toward improving our understanding of how an El Nino works and what makes the atmosphere and the ocean couple to create a strong event," Hackert says.