We've been faithfully providing daily global imagery from MODIS, VIIRS, and other instruments for the last 7+ years and we're now entering new territory - we're going to provide a rolling month of geostationary imagery from GOES-East, GOES-West and Himawari-8.
That's imagery available at 10 MINUTE increments for the last month!
Our current offerings will be Red Visible, Clean Infrared and Air Mass. We may add more in the future, or provide higher resolution versions of this imagery - keep an eye on the blog for any updates! In particular, the Red Visible layer is currently being displayed at 1km spatial resolution but may be available at its native 500m in the future.
Open Worldview's latest release (v.3.2.0): https://worldview.earthdata.nasa.gov
TIP: The geostationary imagery from GOES-East, GOES-West and Himawari-8 is available in 10 minute increments starting at 00:00.
TIP: The Red Visible layer is only available during the daytime; the Clean Infrared and Air Mass layers are available all day!
Check out our latest Worldview tour story that shows off the geostationary imagery - Hurricane Dorian (September 2019)
Read more about Geostationary imagery on the Earthdata website - Now Available in Worldview: Earth Every 10 Minutes
and MOST IMPORTANTLY, get started with geostationary imagery in Worldview!
As always, if you have any comments or feedback, contact us at support@earthdata.nasa.gov
PS: geostationary imagery isn't just for hurricanes and clouds! Here's an example showing a recent fire in northern California combining red band imagery from GOES-West with fires and thermal anomalies from Suomi NPP / VIIRS over the morning of 2019-10-27: