Scientists
unveiled an unprecedented new look at our planet at night. A global composite
image, constructed using cloud-free night images from a new NASA and National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) satellite, shows the glow of
natural and human-built phenomena across the planet in greater detail than ever
before.
Many
satellites are equipped to look at Earth during the day, when they can observe
our planet fully illuminated by the sun. With a new sensor aboard the NASA-NOAA
Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (NPP) satellite launched last year,
scientists now can observe Earth's atmosphere and surface during nighttime
hours.
The
new sensor, the day-night band of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite
(VIIRS), is sensitive enough to detect the nocturnal glow produced by Earth's
atmosphere and the light from a single ship in the sea. Satellites in the U.S.
Defense Meteorological Satellite Program have been making observations with
low-light sensors for 40 years. But the VIIRS day-night band can better detect
and resolve Earth's night lights.
"For
all the reasons that we need to see Earth during the day, we also need to see
Earth at night," said Steve Miller, a researcher at NOAA's Colorado State
University Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere. "Unlike
humans, the Earth never sleeps."
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