Public Archive

A patchy record of DIY satellite imagery and weather notes since 2020. The open-weather public archive is open to everyone willing and able to contribute.

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Ground Station Type
Automatic Ground Stations are local, semi-permanent stations that record and upload satellite transmissions automatically once per day. Manual ground stations are DIY and often mobile; operators manually record and upload satellite transmissions.
Satellite
The archive contains Automatic Picture Transmissions (APT) by US weather satellites NOAA-15, NOAA-18 and NOAA-19.
Nowcast
Collective earth-sensing events led by open-weather, co-produced by a network of contributors around the world.
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A list of tagged contributors only. Please contact us if you want to be added.
974 archive entries × Clear Filters
2025-03-19 22:58:00
Cosmos Astronomy Club
Pune, India
India
NOAA-18
2025-03-19 23:41:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-20 10:08:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
2025-03-20 10:43:00
The Seaweed Institute and Goonown Growers
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, UK
UK
NOAA-19
2025-03-20 12:06:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-20 12:09:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-20 22:30:00
The Seaweed Institute and Goonown Growers
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
2025-03-20 22:45:00
Cosmos Astronomy Club
Pune, India
India
NOAA-18
2025-03-21 12:25:10
Simeon Lok, Ella Richards, Rosie Everitt, Lena Prollochs, Millie Twist, Prinali Dilipo, Zhe Long Ou, Elinam Hammond, Maryam Ahmadi, and Sasha Engelmann,
Royal Holloway University , United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
It was overcast and dry. Some sun was peaking through. It got a bit windy at times, but there was usually a nice gentle breeze. It was about sixteen degrees Celsius. The satellite pass was really interesting to see. The experience was quite grounding - being connected to an orbiting machine in the sky.
2025-03-21 12:25:30
Richard A Carter
University of York, Campus East, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
Software problems caused frequent glitches in the audio stream, resulting in this rather "striated" sounding, despite an otherwise excellent signal. A reminder, if there ever was, of the fragile chain of material structures and processes that enable these activities - and of how this fragility emerges from their status as constantly performing 'agents' in the world, rather than the typical image of technology as always fully tamed, always fully obedient to human imperatives.
2025-03-21 20:25:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-15
2025-03-21 21:36:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2025-03-21 22:16:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
2025-03-21 23:20:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-22 10:21:07
Sasha Engelmann
Hackney Downs, London, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
"That's so MacGyver!" says a blonde woman with a dog when I explain my tape-measure Yagi-Uda antenna. She and her friend / partner chat to me for a few minutes and walk off yelling back funding schemes that open-weather could apply to. "Welcome Trust.... Discovery Grant! Check it out!" I hear as they leave audible distance. I wonder if I've just met an arts and culture boss of some kind. I had come out to the park around 10:20am to catch a NOAA-19 pass that would pass over London at 90 degrees in maximum elevation- an elevation I have only rarely seen in my whole career capturing satellite images. A boy's football team is practising in my usual spot, so my reception is perhaps not as perfect as it normally is when I can see a perfect diagonal North-South across the Downs. Spring is everywhere today, in shooting daffodils and unfurling leaves. A twiggy plant that I had previously identified as a Serbian Lilac in my front garden reveals itselt to be a sycamore tree as its leaves unfold.
2025-03-22 10:23:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
2025-03-22 18:21:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-15
2025-03-22 23:07:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-23 10:08:54
Richard A Carter
University of York, Campus East, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
Equipment troubles finally subsided for today's pass, resulting in a pleasingly expansive view of Europe and parts of North Africa. One interesting aside is that the wind was such that it blew through small gaps in the antenna, making distinctly musical notes in the process - can imagine a speculative art project in which the antenna is turned into a sort of instrument, working alongside the distinct notes of the NOAA transmission coming in. It would be quite the composition!
2025-03-23 18:36:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
2025-03-23 19:36:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-15
2025-03-23 21:00:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
It is the third day after the spring equinox. When spring arrives, we tend to know with a certainty that perhaps only the onset of autumn compares. I woke to bird song. It was only 5 am yet a Blackbird's voice cut through the night. I have seen the Blackbird during the day, perched on the balcony railing next to the bedroom window. It sung for perhaps 10 or 15 minutes before other birds joined, and the dawn chorus kicked in. I lay in bed in the greying light and wondered: how does the first bird know when to sing? It felt as if the Blackbird had sung up the sun, not the other way around.
2025-03-23 22:40:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-24 11:06:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-24 11:08:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-24 11:48:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
2025-03-24 20:48:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
2025-03-24 21:45:00
Cosmos Astronomy Club
Pune, India
India
NOAA-19
2025-03-25 10:18:00
Cosmos Astronomy Club
Pune, India
India
NOAA-19
2025-03-25 10:53:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-25 20:20:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-15
2025-03-25 20:35:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
2025-03-25 21:16:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
2025-03-25 22:19:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-26 08:38:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-15
2025-03-26 12:33:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-26 18:17:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-15
2025-03-26 18:57:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
2025-03-26 18:59:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-15
2025-03-26 21:05:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-19
2025-03-26 23:09:00
Cosmos Astronomy Club
Pune, India
India
NOAA-18
2025-03-27 10:59:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-19
2025-03-27 12:24:38
KLIDEN FLORES LIMA
LIMA, PERU
PERU
NOAA-15
Satellite: NOAA 15 Pass Start: 27 Mar 2025 12:24:38 GMT Pass Duration: 14:55 Elevation: 54 Azimuth: 281 Solar Elevation: 14.8 Direction: southbound Creation Time: 27 Mar 2025 12:26:28 GMT Satellite Type: NOAA Channel A: 2 (near infrared) Channel B: 4 (thermal infrared) Enhancement: HVCT Ground Station: LIMA, PERU/South America My experience was pleasant because in my exact location there are no weather problems, but in other latitudes of my country there are weather crises of various types.
2025-03-27 18:31:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
2025-03-27 19:32:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-15
2025-03-27 23:40:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-28 08:19:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-15
2025-03-28 10:08:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-19
2025-03-28 10:46:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-19
2025-03-28 10:48:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-19
2025-03-28 12:04:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-28 20:38:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-19
2025-03-28 23:27:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-29 18:39:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-15
2025-03-29 20:16:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-15
2025-03-29 22:14:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
2025-03-29 23:17:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-30 11:33:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-30 12:31:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2025-03-30 19:53:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
2025-03-30 23:02:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-18
2025-03-30 23:05:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-30 23:30:00
Zack Wettstein
Seattle, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-03-31 11:18:00
Heidi Neilson
Gilboa, New York, United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-31 11:41:09
Sasha Engelmann
Nicosia, Cyprus
Cyprus
NOAA-18
Teaching undergraduate UK geography students in Nicosia, Cyprus is an experience of a clash between worlds- the worlds of Greek and Turkish Cypriots living across checkpoints and buffer zones, and those of students eager to extract 'data' on life in a divided city. Standing on the beach of the suburb of Varosha, yesterday, our guide Georgia pointed to her apartment building, framed by two once-regal hotels, to which she she has not been able to return, like all residents of Varosha, since the Turkish army arrived in 1974. She was due to be married on the day she had to leave her town. She points out fields that once boasted dense orange groves, and speaks about the tradition of making sculptures from oranges in the shapes of dolphins and other animals. She shows us the shop that had the "best cheese sandwich of the 70s- a delicacy", and the boutique where women would buy fur coats. An abandoned kiosk marks the place where Varosha first served soft ice cream. There is an eeriness both to being in such places on a research trip, and to seeing the ruins being photographed by the numerous passerby and members of the public. Many pose in front of dilapidated photo shops and ruined movie theatres. We speak about ruins, aesthetics, dark tourism and what the gesture of taking a selfie in Varosha means. It is unseasonably warm in Cyprus, as most residents tell us- at least ten degrees above the average temperature of springtime. Saharan dust arrived in Nicosia over the weekend.
2025-03-31 12:19:00
Vienna Automatic
Vienna, Austria
Austria
NOAA-18
2025-03-31 12:58:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-18
2025-03-31 19:27:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-15
2025-03-31 22:40:00
Filip Shatlan and Diana Engelmann
Gainesville, Florida , United States
United States
NOAA-19
2025-03-31 23:17:00
Zack Wettstein
Seattle, United States
United States
NOAA-18
2025-04-01 09:13:00
Hospitalfield
Arbroath, Scotland
Scotland
NOAA-15
2025-04-01 09:16:00
Goownown Growers The Seaweed Institute
CAST, Helston, Cornwall, United Kingdom
United Kingdom
NOAA-15
2025-04-01 11:27:51
Sasha Engelmann
Nicosia, Cyprus
Cyprus
NOAA-18
We drive up the road to the English School Radio Club at dust, the sky a soft purple-blue, and a tower with several Yagi antennas comes into view. At ground level are two bungalows, one with the historical 'home' of the English School Radio Club, and a new renovated bungalow used today, as the older structure is failing. Nestor (President of the Cyprus Amateur Radio Society) and Demetris (President of the Nicosia Chapter of the Cyprus Amateur Radio Society) tell me of the history of the club, the days when one had to call the fire department to be lifted on a raised platform to fix the antenna. They have a cabinet full of hundreds and hundreds of QSL cards, written postcards that confirmed amateur radio contacts between operators around the world. "There are some here from countries that no longer exist!" they tell me, and I immediately find myself spreading out hundreds of QSL cards from the former Yugoslavia on a peeling green table. Next door, we power up the transceivers and I make three QSOs (radio amateur contacts) with hams in Slovenia, Hungary and Barcelona. I speak the longest to the amateur in Barcelona, who tells me my contact is 'excellent' and makes good wishes to me and my family. While we listen and tune the radio, I hear many other stories of amateur radio on Cyprus, of speaking to amateurs in Syria, Egypt, Turkey and Iran, and of the politics of amateur radio and current educational programmes aimed to be inclusive to women and girls. The radio is so clear and engrossing - voice rising clearly on SSB through the 'whoosh' of the spectrum - that we are late for our dinner reservation.
2025-04-01 23:05:00
Zack Wettstein
Seattle, United States
United States
NOAA-18