Pohnpei, along with Yap, Chuuk, and Kosrae-four groups of remote and breathtaking island states-comprise the 607-island nation that is the Federated States of Micronesia.
The rainfall data was used to make the 3-D image at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md, which showed some high thunderstorms northwest of its center. Some of these storms were found to be reaching heights of more than 14.7 km (9.1 miles).
GPM is co-managed by NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, JAXA.
NASA-JAXA's GPM core observatory passed over tropical depression five at 1031 Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) (6:31 am EDT). A microwave imager found that rain was dropping at a rate of 22.4 mm (0.9 inches) per hour in bands of convective storms located northwest of the center of circulation.
At 1500 UTC (11 am EDT), the Joint Typhoon Warning Center noted that the cyclone was centered near 8.5 north latitude and 154.4 east longitude, about 175 nautical miles east-northeast of Chuuk. Maximum sustained winds were near 30 knots (34.5 mph/55.5 kph), and the cyclone was moving to the west-northwest at 11 knots (*12.6 mph/20.3 kph) through Micronesia.
This video, courtesy of NASA, is titled "NASA | A Week in the Life of Rain."
The forecast calls for Tropical Cyclone 05W to become a tropical storm and intensify to 45 knots (51.7 mph/83.3 kph). When it does reach tropical storm status it will be renamed Haishen. The system is then expected to turn to the northeast when it gets near Fananu, a village and municipality in the state of Chuuk, on April 6.
[Source: NASA]