Standard - NOAA 2025

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All NOAA Weather Radio stations broadcast on one of seven frequencies in the VHF Public Service band: 162.400 megahertz (MHz), 162.425 MHz, 162.450 MHz, 162.475 MHz, 162.500 MHz, 162.525 MHz, and 162.550 MHz.
The term current describes the motion of the ocean. Watch our three-minute video podcast to learn what puts the motion in the ocean. Ocean currents are driven by wind, water density differences, and tides. Oceanic currents describe the movement of water from one location to another.
The scales describe the environmental disturbances for three event types: geomagnetic storms, solar radiation storms, and radio blackouts. The scales have numbered levels, analogous to hurricanes, tornadoes, and earthquakes that convey severity. They list possible effects at each level.
Frequency range (GHz): 23 GHz to 183 GHz. Nadir resolution: 74.8 km (K/KA band), 31.6 km (V-band), 15.8 km (W/G band). Scanning Technique: Cross-track 96 earth FOVs per scan. Swath width: 2500+ km.
NOAA APT Satellites transmit on frequencies between 137.1000 and 137.9125 MHz FM using between 30 and 40kHz bandwidth. WXtoImg will function with receivers using a bandwidth as low as 12kHz, but there will be some image degradation. Receiver sensitivity should ideally be about 0.2uV to 0.25uV.
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NOAA headquarters Our agency holds key leadership roles in shaping international ocean, fisheries, climate, space and weather policies.
The seven NWR broadcast frequencies are: 162.400 MHz, 162.425 MHz, 162.450 MHz, 162.450 MHz, 162.475 MHz, 162.500 MHz, 162.525 MHz, and 162.550 MHz.
NOAA Weather Radio broadcasts the latest weather information on seven frequencies in the 162.40 to 162.55 MHz range and can be received up to 40 miles from the transmitter.

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