EarthPOV

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Here's looking at us

3D Overview.jpg


With appreciation of the Overview Effect. Look at us and see the wonder. Overview Planetary

Earth observing satellites, the "Afternoon Constellation", the "A-Train" joined by ‪OCO-2 newly launched Orbiting Carbon Observatory

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With a Supermoon setting ~ August 2014

Supermoon moonset-Aug2014 ISS.jpg


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August 11, 2014

1st light! OCO-2 announces their data! http://www.earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php

OCO-2 is now at the head of the international “Afternoon Constellation,” or “A-Train,” of Earth-observing satellites in an orbit that crosses the equator at 1:36 p.m. local time.

The image [spectra image below] shows some of the first data taken by OCO-2 as it flew over Papua-New Guinea on August 6, 2014. Each plot shows three different spectra, or wavelength, observed by the satellite’s spectrometers: 760 nanometers (atmospheric oxygen), 1610 nanometers (carbon dioxide), and 2060 nanometers (carbon dioxide). As OCO-2 flies over Earth’s sunlit hemisphere, each spectrometer collects a frame three times per second (a total of about 9,000 frames from each orbit). Each frame is divided into eight spectra that record the amount of molecular oxygen or carbon dioxide over adjacent ground footprints, each of which is about 2.25 kilometers (1.39 miles) long and a few hundred meters wide. When displayed as an image, the spectra appear like bar codes. The dark lines indicate absorption by molecular oxygen or carbon dioxide.

“The initial data from OCO-2 appear exactly as expected; the spectra lines are well resolved, sharp, and deep,” said OCO-2 chief architect and calibration lead Randy Pollock of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “We still have a lot of work to do to go from having a working instrument to having a well-calibrated and scientifically useful instrument, but this was an amazingly important milestone.”


OCO-2 firstspectra 2014218.png


OCO-2 png amo 2014218 Aug06,2014.jpg


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