Jump to content

Wikipedia:Featured picture candidates/Animated Video of the 2011 North American Blizzard as shown from the perspective of a Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite operated by the United States National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 4 Jun 2016 at 20:36:08 (UTC)

OriginalFeb 2011 storm moves across the U.S. - Animation made with images from the NOAA-NASA GOES 13 satellite showing a giant storm developing and moving across the U.S. The animation shows clouds building over New Mexico and Texas early in the day. As the system develops and moves north-east, the storm grows and becomes more organized. By the end of February 1, 2011, the storm was a sprawling comma that extended from the Midwest to New England.
Reason
This is a satellite video loop from the North American region for an approximately 72-hour period beginning 31 January and ending 2 February, during which time a rather sizable portion of the United States and parts of Canada and Mexico experienced one of the worst Winter Storms/Blizzard in history. This was one of only 16 storms to have earned a Category 5 rating on the Regional Snowfall Index. This image comes to us courtesy of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the parent organization of the US National Weather Service, which operates a number of Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GEOS) - include the GOES 13 bird which captured this specific footage - in conjunction with NASA.
Articles in which this image appears
January 31 – February 2, 2011 North American blizzard
FP category for this image
As a guess I'd say either Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Natural phenomena/Weather or Wikipedia:Featured pictures/Space/Looking back
Creator
NASA/NOAA/NWS (PD-USGov)
  • The Theora codec, which this video is encoded in, was already outdated in 2013. You should download the video from its source at NASA, and then convert that to WebM format, encoded in VP9. This file format is more efficient - so a video of the same size as this ogg candidate would be of higher quality. WebM (VP8 and VP9) have significantly better hardware support than Theora, which means that videos can be played on target devices with lower power/battery costs. I wrote some instructions for transcoding video to VP8 here, but you should really be using VP9. - hahnchen 19:43, 27 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]
  • @TomStar81: you can also do a WebM (VP8) conversion here [1]. Source is [2], source file [3]. Just enter the source file's URL in the box. Bammesk (talk) 14:14, 28 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Promoted File:Feb 2011 Storm Moves Across the U.S.OGG --Armbrust The Homunculus 20:57, 4 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]