This is a maintained fork of jakiestfu/himawari.js published under a different namespace (npm i @ungoldman/himawari
).
The original module (unmaintained since 2016) is broken due to a URL change from the satellite imagery provider.
See jakiestfu/himawari.js#29 for more info.
Download real-time images of Earth from the Himawari-8 satellite
Himawari 8 is a geostationary weather satellite deployed by the Japan Meteorological Agency. It takes photographs of Earth every 10 minutes.
- Getting Started
- Usage
- Command Line Interface
- Acknowledgements
- Example Images
- Example Scripts
- Licensing
brew install imagemagick
brew install graphicsmagick
npm i @ungoldman/himawari
If you would like to generate videos, ffmpeg
is also required.
brew install ffmpeg
var himawari = require('@ungoldman/himawari')
himawari({
/**
* The zoom level of the image. Can be 1-5 for non-infrared, and 1-3 for infrared (default: 1)
* Each zoom level requires more images to be downloaded and therefore stitched
* together. Higher zoom yields a higher resolution image.
* @type {Number}
*/
zoom: 1,
/**
* The time of the picture desired. If you want to get the latest image, use 'latest'
* @type {String|Date}
*/
date: 'latest', // Or new Date() or a date string
/**
* Turns on logging
* @type {Boolean}
*/
debug: false,
/**
* If set to true, an image on the infrared light spectrum will be generated. Please note that
* infrared only supports zooms up to 3
* @type {Boolean}
*/
infrared: false,
/**
* The location to save the resulting image
* @type {String}
*/
outfile: '/path/to/output/earth.jpg',
/**
* Set to true to parallelize tile downloads. Can be CPU intensive but decreases time to download images.
* @type {Boolean}
*/
parallel: false,
/**
* Skip empty images from being saved
* @type {Boolean}
*/
skipEmpty: true,
/**
* The max duration in milliseconds before requests for images and data times out
* @type {Number}
*/
timeout: 30000,
/**
* If true, only prints the URLs of the images that would have been downloaded
* @type {Boolean}
*/
urls: false,
/**
* A success callback if the image downloads successfully
* @type {Function}
*/
success: function () { process.exit() },
/**
* A callback if the image cannot be downloaded or saved
* @type {Function}
* @param {Object} err An error object or information surrounding the issue
*/
error: function (err) { console.log(err) },
/**
* A callback that is fired every time a tile has been downloaded.
* @param {Object} info Information about the download such as filepath, part, and total images
*/
chunk: function (info) {
console.log(info.outfile + ': ' + info.part + '/' + info.total)
}
})
There is also a command-line interface available if you install it with -g
.
npm i -g himawari
This installs a program called himawari
that can be used like so:
Usage: himawari [options]
--zoom, -z The zoom level of the image. Can be 1-5. (Default: `1`)
--date, -d The time of the picture desired. If you want to get the latest image, use 'latest'. (Default: `"latest"`)
--debug, -l Turns on logging. (Default: `false`)
--outfile, -o The location to save the resulting image. (Default: `"himawari-{date}.jpg"` in current directory)
--parallel, -p Parallelize downloads for increased speeds (can be CPU intensive)
--skipempty, -s Skip saving images that contain no useful information (i.e. "No Image") (Default: `true`)
--timeout, -t The max duration in milliseconds before requests for images and data times out (Default: `30000`)
--urls, -u Only print the URLs of the images that would have been downloaded (Default: `false`)
--infrared, -i Capture picture on the infrared spectrum (Default: `false`)
--version, -v Prints the version of the package
--help, -h Show help
- Japan Meteorological Agency
- NICT
- Michael Pote created a Powershell Script that inspired this library.
There are two example files that showcase how Himawari.js can be used. The first, basic.js
, is to simply be executed and will download the latest image of earth and save it to your Desktop.
The second, video.js
, will get a particular date (one where it starts off all black), and will decrement 10 minutes from that date until it has been 24 hours. The resulting images will be saved to a directory, and then piped to ffmpeg
which will stitch the images together in a lovely video for you to oogle over.
MIT