Out of the Blue and Into
the Black
New Views of the Earth at
Night
The night is nowhere near
as dark as most of us think. In fact, the Earth is never really dark. And we
don’t have to be in the dark about what is happening at night anymore either. —Steven Miller, atmospheric scientist, Colorado State University
By Michael
CarlowiczDesign by Paul PrzyborskiDecember 5, 2012
The night side of Earth twinkles with light. The first thing to
stand out is the cities. “Nothing tells us more about the spread of humans
across the Earth than city lights,” asserts Chris Elvidge, a NOAA scientist who
has studied them for 2
Away from human settlements, light still shines. Wildfires and
volcanoes rage. Oil and gas wells burn like candles. Auroras dance across the
polar skies. Moonlight and starlight reflect off the water, snow, clouds, and
deserts. Even the air and ocean sometimes glow.
A handful of scientists have observed earthly night lights over
the past four decades with military satellites and astronaut photography. But
in 2012, the view became significantly clearer. The Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership(NPP)
satellite — launched in October 2011 by NASA, the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the Department of Defense — carries a
low-light sensor that can distinguish night lights with six times better
spatial resolution and 250 times better resolution of lighting levels (dynamic
range) than before. Also, because Suomi NPP is a civilian science satellite,
data is available to scientists within minutes to hours of acquisition.
The Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on Suomi
NPP can observe dim light down to the scale of an isolated highway lamp or
fishing boat. It can even detect faint, nocturnal atmospheric light — known as airglow — and observe clouds lit by it.
Through the use of its “day-night band,” VIIRS can make the first quantitative
measurements of light emissions and reflections, distinguishing the intensity
and the sources of night light. The sum of these measurements gives us a global
view of the human footprint on the Earth.
“These lights
have always been there, but we’ve never had an ability to take full advantage
of them,” Miller says. “Now we finally have a way of doing that.”
“City lights
provide a fairly straightforward means to map urban versus rural areas, and to
show where major population centers are and where they are not,” says William
Stefanov of the International Space Station program. (View Large Image - NASA Earth Observatory and NOAA National
Geophysical Data Center)
Light from the aurora australis,or
“southern lights,” is bright enough to reveal the ice edge in Antarctica’s
Queen Maud Land. (View Large Image - NASA Earth Observatory and NOAA National
Geophysical Data Center)
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