Almost
40 years to the day after the Apollo 17 crew snapped the famed "blue
marble" image of Earth floating in space on December 7, 1972, NASA has
unveiled "black marble" video views of the planet by night.
Lights across the earth are pictured in this NASA
handout satellite image obtained by Reuters December 5, 2012. This new
image of the Earth at night is a composite assembled from data acquired
by the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (Suomi NPP) satellite
over nine days in April 2012 and thirteen days in October 2012. It took
312 orbits and 2.5 terabytes of data to get a clear shot of every parcel
of Earth’s land surface and islands. REUTERS/NASA/Handout.
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The sensor can capture the equivalent of three low-light images simultaneously, giving researchers the opportunity to study Earth's atmosphere, land and oceans at night.
"It's very high-quality data," NOAA scientist Christopher Elvidge told reporters at the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco.
"I rate it six times better spatial resolution."
The so-called day-night band of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite, or VIIRS, can distinguish the night-time glow of Earth's atmosphere as well as a light from a single ship at sea. The resolution is far sharper than what has been available previously.
VIIRS is aboard the Suomi NPP satellite, which orbits about 500 miles above Earth's poles.
Scientists used the day-night sensor to watch the superstorm Sandy, illuminated by moonlight, hit the New Jersey shore on October 29. It also captured the power outages that plunged the area into darkness as the storm tore into populated areas.
The National Weather Service is starting to use the VIIRS day-night sensor to forecast fog in coastal regions, including San Francisco.
Some VIIRS images have surprised scientists. The sensor, for example, captured light from the upper atmosphere illuminating clouds and ice in visible wavelengths - by night.
Link to images: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/NPP/news/earth-at-night.html
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