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Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum
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Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Dec 18, 2015

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Adele Arnold
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Page 1: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Environmental Science From Space

Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted

Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum

Page 2: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Remote Sensing= learning about an object or phenomenon

without touching, usually using satellites or airplanes

http://www.nasa.gov/centers/langley/news/factsheets/RemoteSensing.html

Page 3: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Experiments/ICE/Channel_Islands/tg_channelislands.php

1830s

Early 1900s

U-2 Spyplane at 70,000 ft – 1950s

CIA Corona satellite – 1960

Page 4: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/earthweek.html

Page 5: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Videos

LandSat video: http://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/about/Terra orbit animation: http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Experiments/ICE/panama/panama_mov2.phpWatch live broadcast of LandSat: http://earthnow.usgs.gov/

Page 6: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Landsat 7

http://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/

http://science.hq.nasa.gov/kids/imagers/ems/infrared.html

Band Bandwidth (nm) Radiation1 450-515 Blue2 525-605 Green3 630-690 Red4 750-900 Near Infrared5 1,550-1,750 Shortwave Infrared6 10,400-12,500 Thermal Infrared7 2,090-2,350 Shortwave Infrared

Page 7: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

1

2

Landsat 7: 7 bands

3

4

56

7

Watsonville3/4/2012

Page 8: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

234

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4-3-2

http://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/

Page 9: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

3-2-1

4-3-2

7-4-2

Page 10: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

http://missionscience.nasa.gov/ems/09_visiblelight.html

INFRARED

Page 11: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

LandSat Spectral SignaturesBand Bandwidth (nm) Radiation

1 450-515 Blue

2 525-605 Green

3 630-690 Red

4 750-900 Near Infrared

5 1,550-1,750 Shortwave Infrared

6 10,400-12,500 Thermal Infrared

7 2,090-2,350 Shortwave Infrared

WATER TREES ROCKS

BUILDINGS

Page 12: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Pixels & RGB Codes= 255,0,0

= 0,255,0

= 0,0,255

=255,255,255

= 0,0,0

= ?,?,?

= 0,255,255

255,0,255

?

Page 13: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

ACTIVITY:

Creating & Interpreting Remote Sensing Images

(Derived from NASA’s Remote Sensing Math)

Page 14: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Key to PixelsFeature Symbol Color RGB Code

Sky

Water

Ice

Land

Plants

Page 15: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Key to PixelsFeature Symbol Color RGB Code

Sky S Black 0,0,0

Water W Blue 0,0,1

Ice I White 1,1,1

Land L Brown 1,1,0

Plants P Green 0,1,0

Page 16: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

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Page 17: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

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Page 18: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

http://science.hq.nasa.gov/kids/imagers/ems/index.html

Page 19: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Reviewing Waves• _________________ (λ) = distance from any point on a

wave to an identical point on the next wave

• _________________ (f) = number of cycles or vibrations per unit of time (1 Hz = 1/s)

• _________________ (v) = distance/time

• __________ = _____________ * _____________

• Speed of light (c) in vacuum = 3.8 x 108 m/s (186,000 miles/second)

Page 20: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Problem #1: Visible Light

• Which color has the longest wavelength?

• Which color has the highest frequency?

• Which color has the highest speed?

http://science.hq.nasa.gov/kids/imagers/ems/index.html

Page 21: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

We can only see a small amount of the light that surrounds us all the time.

http://science.hq.nasa.gov/kids/imagers/ems/index.html

Page 22: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Radio Waves

• Carry TV, AM & FM radio, cell phone, & other communication signals

• Used by radio telescopes to study radiation emitted by objects in space

Carbon Monoxide (CO) gases in our Milky Way

galaxy

Page 23: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Problem #2: Radio• What’s the frequency of

your favorite radio station?

• Calculate its wavelength.

Page 24: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Microwaves

• Heat food by making molecules rotate fast

• Used to detect & measure distance to objects, such as airplanes & weather, with radar

sarakwatch.comhttp://science.hq.nasa.gov/kids/imagers/ems/micro.html

Page 25: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Microwaves

Credit: NASA image courtesy the QuikSCAT Science Team at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Credit: NASA/WMAP Science Team

Background radiation in the universe gives clues to the Big Bang

http://missionscience.nasa.gov/ems/06_microwaves.html

Page 26: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Infrared Waves

• Heat – used to determine temperature of objects

• Uses– Keeping food, spaces, animals

warm (heat lamps)– TV remote signal– Firefighting– Rattlesnakes use to detect

warm-blooded animals– Remote sensing

• Determine temperature of land, water

• Map clouds, vegetation

Image of Phoenix (AZ) with near infrared as red

Wikipedia

Page 27: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

http://missionscience.nasa.gov/ems/07_infraredwaves.html

http://www.osdpd.noaa.gov/ml/ocean/sst/sst_50km.html

Page 28: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Infrared Imaging

• What object is in the image below?

Page 29: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Visible Light

• Only wavelengths we can see

• Sources: sun, light bulbs• Uses

– Human vision– Photosynthesis of

plants– Remote sensing: map

height of mountains, trees, clouds, etc.

Page 30: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Laser Altimetry (LiDAR)

Outside Davenport, north of Santa Cruzwww.nps.edu/Faculty/Olsen/Student_theses/11Sep_Harmon.pdf

Where are the tallest trees?Credit: NASA Earth Observatory/Image by Jesse Allen and Robert Simmon/Based on data from Michael Lefsky.http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/forest-height-map.html

Page 31: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

• Choose one of the following devices– Bluetooth (2400 MHz)– GPS (1575.42 MHz)– Wi-Fi (5 GHz)

• What wavelength is this?

• What type of radiation is this?

Garmin.com

Wikipedia

Problem #3: Technology

Page 32: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Ultraviolet Light

• Causes sunburn• Partially blocked by

ozone in atmosphere• Astronomers use to

study stars

UV image of Earth taken from Moon

Bees can see UV!

Page 33: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Hubble Space Telescope

stars forming in the Eagle Nebula

spiral galaxy Messier_100

Wikipedia

Page 34: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

X-Rays

• Image bones & teeth for medicine

• Astronomers use to study very hot objects such as stars, supernova & black holes mosaic of several Chandra X-ray Observatory

images of the central region of our Milky Way galaxy reveals hundreds of white dwarf stars, neutron stars, and black holes. Separately, the Solar and Heliophysics Observatory (SOHO) captured these images of the Sun representing an entire solar cycle from 1996 through 2006. Credit: NASA/UMass/D.Wang et al. Sun images from SOHO – EIT Consortium: NASA/ESA

Page 35: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Gamma Rays

• Sources: – Radioactive atoms– Nuclear explosions– Lightning strikes– Supernova explosions (death of

star)

– Black holes

• Uses:– Detect spread of cancer– Kill cancer cells– Scan shipping containers for

security– Detect elements on other

planets

Page 36: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Mapping Vegetation

3-2-1

4-3-2

Normalized Difference Vegetation Index NDVI = (NIR – Red) / (NIR + Red)

North America seasonal NDVI animation: http://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/obscure_data.html

Page 37: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Problem #4: Mapping Vegetation

• Calculate NDVI for the healthy tree.

• Calculate NDVI for the stressed tree.

Normalized Difference Vegetation Index NDVI = (NIR – Red) / (NIR + Red)

http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Experiments/ICE/panama/panama_ex2.php

red red

Page 38: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Vegetation Index Products

NASA Earth Observatory

Page 39: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

234

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4-3-2

http://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/

Page 40: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.

Activity: Remote Sensing of Barro Colorado Island

NASA’s Rainforest at the Crossroadshttp://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Experiments/ICE/panama/

Page 41: Environmental Science From Space Note: All images from NASA unless otherwise noted Remote Sensing and the Electromagnetic Spectrum.