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What happened to intellicast interactive radar?

What happened to intellicast interactive radar?

Intellicast Merges with Weather Underground Starting January 17, 2019, we began redirecting traffic from Intellicast.com to wunderground.com. Even though the Intellicast name and website will be going away, the technology and features that you have come to rely on will continue to live on wunderground.com.

What is the best interactive radar?

Here Are the Best Weather Radar Websites and Apps

  1. National Weather Service. Website: https://radar.weather.gov.
  2. The Weather Channel. Website: https://weather.com/maps/usdopplerradar.
  3. Windy. Website: https://www.windy.com.
  4. AccuWeather.
  5. Weather Underground.
  6. WeatherBug.
  7. NOAA Weather Radar Live.

What is a Doppler radar and how does it work?

Doppler radar is a specific type of radar that uses the Doppler effect to gather velocity data from the particles that are being measured. For example, a Doppler radar transmits a signal that gets reflected off raindrops within a storm.

Does intellicast have an app?

About Intellicast Weather Intellicast Weather is a free app for Android published in the Astronomy list of apps, part of Home & Hobby. The company that develops Intellicast Weather is The Weather Company. The latest version released by its developer is 1.3. android.

What app do storm chasers use?

Radarscope
Radarscope is the best app for people who are serious about the dangerous science of storm chasing. This dynamic little app was designed for specifically for storm chasers as well as professional TV meteorologists, which make it a pretty nifty tool for science-minded hobbyists as well.

What is monostatic and bistatic radar?

Bistatic radar is a radar system comprising a transmitter and receiver that are separated by a distance comparable to the expected target distance. Conversely, a radar in which the transmitter and receiver are co-located is called a monostatic radar.

What radiation do radars use?

Radars usually operate at radio frequencies (RF) between 300 MHz and 15 GHz. They generate EMFs that are called RF fields. RF fields within this part of the electromagnetic spectrum are known to interact differently with human body.