News on research satellites
- Will we ever travel to an earthlike exoplanet and how?
- The "Pioneer anomali" explained
- DAWN will stay with Vesta for an extra 40 days
- Voygare 1 still far from the interstellar medium
- Nuclear spaceship being prepared for launch
- Rocket launched into Aurora
- Satellite images of nighttime lights help track disease outbreak
- Voyage1 shuts down heat but continues another 13 years
- Voyager1 reaches a pause to interstellar space
- First images from VIIRS
- First space-measurements of Earths water-vapor
- Mission to touch the Sun in 2018
- Manned mission to asteroid
- ROSAT crashes to Earth
- ESA chooses next two science missions
- UARS satellite plunged into the Pacific Ocean
- Exploring an asteroid with the Desert RATS
- UARS satellite crashed - location unknown
- The 6 ton UARS satelite crasches tonight
- Underwater training for manned asteroid mission underwater
- 6ton NASA satellite soon to crash
- Spacejunk is a problem but tiny bits are worse
- Tour the Solarsystem with spaceprobes
- Jupiter-Bound spacecraft captures Earth and Moon
- Juno Spacecraft Launches to Jupiter
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First images from VIIRS
Thursday, 24 November 2011 13:04
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| Spaceflight - Research satellites |
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The Visible Infrared Imager Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the United States’ newest Earth-observing satellite, NPP, acquired its first measurements on November 21, 2011. This image above shows a broad swath of eastern North America from the Great Lakes to Cuba. The image shows the full scene from Hudson Bay to the northern coast of Venezuela. VIIRS collects radiometric imagery in visible and infrared wavelengths of the Earth's land, atmosphere, and oceans. “This image is a next step forward in the success of VIIRS and the NPP mission,” said James Gleason, project scientist for the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. NPP was launched on October 28, 2011, and recently reached its final orbit at an altitude of 824 km. The satellite operations team has powered on all of the instruments, and the spacecraft is now traveling around Earth at 8km/S VIIRS is the largest instrument onboard NPP, weighing in at 556 pounds (252 kilograms). Its data, collected from 22 channels across the electromagnetic spectrum, will be used to observe the Earth's surface including fires, ice, ocean color, vegetation, clouds, and land and sea surface temperatures. The NPP Team at the Space Science and Engineering Center, University of Wisconsin–Madison, created the image above using three channels (red, green and blue) of VIIRS data. The original data - taken from the first full NPP orbit with VIIRS turned on - were processed at the NOAA Satellite Operations Facility. “The task now for the science community is to evaluate VIIRS performance and determine the accuracy of its data products,” said Chris Justice, a professor of geography at the University of Maryland, who will be using VIIRS data in his research. “These long-term data records are critical in monitoring how the Earth's surface is changing - either from human activity or through climate change.” Source: Earthobservatory |




