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940 points mihau | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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megaloblasto ◴[] No.45263373[source]
Sadly, you can't really get NOAA satellite images any more. NOAA-15 and 19 were decommissioned August 19, 2025, and NOAA 18 was decommissioned in June. It's my understanding that you'll need a much more powerful antenna to get images from the new satellites. Still, SDR is great fun. It's incredible to realize that all this information is stored in electromagnetic waves and passing through us all the time.
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egorfine ◴[] No.45263485[source]
I wonder what does it entail to have a NOAA satellite decommissioned? Is it just turned off or is it directed to fall down into a designated area in the Pacific?
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megaloblasto ◴[] No.45263500[source]
They will continue to orbit for about 150 years, slowly falling towards earth until the drag from the atmosphere burns them up.

"Like many older satellites, the POES satellites do not have thrusters to support a controlled reentry into Earth’s atmosphere at the end of their mission life. Instead, once passivated, they are safely powered down, placed in a non-operational state, and left in a stable orbit. Without onboard propulsion or significant atmospheric drag at their current altitude, NOAA estimates they will remain in orbit for roughly 150 years before gradually reentering the atmosphere and disintegrating."[1]

[1] https://www.nesdis.noaa.gov/news/legacy-orbit-noaa-decommiss...

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egorfine ◴[] No.45263767[source]
It sucks they power it down
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jandrese ◴[] No.45264354[source]
Probably to recover the frequency for a newer satellite. The spectrum they transmit on is quite scarce.
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1. immibis ◴[] No.45272673{3}[source]
You have to have an antenna pointing at the satellite though. That's an additional layer of selectivity.