PlanetCitizen: Difference between revisions

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And of course they'll be numbered by NASA ;-  
And of course they'll be numbered by NASA ;-  


What will be the most impressive, after forty some years, will be the images of us, Planet Earth, if all goes per plan  
What will be the most impressive, after forty some years, will be the images of us, Planet Earth, if all goes per plan.
 
'''''Here we GO!'''''


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''Scientists will soon get a steady stream of data about how both the Earth and the Sun are doing, for years to come.''  
''Scientists will soon get a steady stream of data about how both the Earth and the Sun are doing, for years to come.''  


And us? The livestream of our planet will kick in. Some kid, somewhere, is likely to be paying attention, enjoy the view, and ask questions. And who knows where that kid will end up.
And us? The livestream of our planet will kick in. "Some kid, somewhere, is likely to be paying attention, enjoy the view, and ask questions. And who knows where that kid will end up."


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Revision as of 09:52, 10 February 2015

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PlanetCitizen News

Launch rescheduled

February 8, 2015 -- It's been some time since December 7, 1972 when the only picture ever snapped by a human of the whole earth was captured -- our iconic "Blue Marble" -- engineers that they are, NASA named the image -- AS17-148-22727

Launched delayed -- here in Florida where we are, the DSCOVR (Deep Space Climate Observatory) mission is on hold; the new launch schedule, Feb 10th.

The new mission will go up with multiple missions -- to monitor space weather and, due to the satellite's orbital distance from Earth (1 mil miles), DSCOVR will be sending back daily images of the 'whole earth' and measuring earth's earth's temperature, our "radiation balance" ("albedo").

It will be good to see ‪#‎Earth360‬ daily and it's going to be, if all goes well, a spectacular re-reminder of our place in the cosmos... ‪#‎PlanetCitizen‬

"DSCOVR will be beaming back a steady stream of images of our home planet from space, a photo of Earth ever two hours, with the images expected to be available online the next day."

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"They'll be posted on a website for the public to see," said Steven Clarke, director of NASA's Joint Agency Satellite Division. "I think it will be an inspiration for people to see the sunlit disk of the Earth."

And of course they'll be numbered by NASA ;-

What will be the most impressive, after forty some years, will be the images of us, Planet Earth, if all goes per plan.

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Scientists will soon get a steady stream of data about how both the Earth and the Sun are doing, for years to come.

And us? The livestream of our planet will kick in. "Some kid, somewhere, is likely to be paying attention, enjoy the view, and ask questions. And who knows where that kid will end up."

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Consider how yrs ago, NASA put out a call about launching this mission -- guess who was one of those who replied? This before his SpaceX was ready to go. Elon Musk. The iconic photo of Earth had inspired him to move his technology vision toward space&earth - he's a #PlanetCitizen too

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX

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Air & Space

DSCOVR and EPIC... For many Earth scientists, the centerpiece of the satellite is the National Institute of Standards Advanced Radiometer, or NISTAR, named for the Maryland-based government laboratory that designed it. The apparatus was built to shed light on Earth’s “radiation balance”—the radiation we receive from our sun minus the radiation we reflect back into space. The difference is retained by our planet as heat, and is calculated by measuring Earth’s reflectivity, called the albedo. Data showing whether Earth’s albedo is decreasing, meaning the atmosphere is retaining more heat because of greenhouse gases or other reasons, could be a significant piece of the climate puzzle.

What was revolutionary wasn’t the basic technology for tracking albedo—it was measuring it from the million-mile perspective out at L1. Most satellites circle the planet at about one-thousandth of that distance, so their readings encompass only a small slice of land, a view that shifts rapidly as they circle the planet every two hours or so. Different climate zones—ice caps, deserts, tropical forests—have different reflectivities, independent of the atmosphere, which needs to be factored in to the overall measurement; it’s virtually impossible to create a whole-Earth portrait from a deck of low-orbit snapshots. “By the time you stitch together all the separate bits of data, the margin of error is too large to be useful,” Asrar says. “DSCOVR, on the other hand, would be like having a thermometer for the whole planet.” It’s not a perfect gauge, NASA’s Szabo cautions. “Earth is…a sphere that reflects light in all directions. So a measurement from any one point will not be the final word. But it will still be very important for the conversation about climate change.”

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Overview and Perspective

See and experience the Earth in new ways

The Overview Effect

Orbital Perspective

January 2015

Recently Added Planet Citizen, Planet Scientist Pages





 






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As the New Year Dawns, Earth from Space

December 2014

For #PlanetCitizen gazing, visit the "Blue Marble" Collection

Security by Design, new definitions of national security to be found in environmental security, planning for global trends

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November 2014

You Are Here And Here!

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Up Here, #EarthPOV Earth's Observation's new website Vid Watch Look Greening

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October 2014

"Ground Truth"

Looking out at our Planet from the International Space Station [1]

Where are you? Find Astropix of your place on #PlanetEarth

Perspective, real perspective... A "thin" layer of atmosphere...

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About PlanetCitizen

#PlanetCitizen #EarthPOV

A coming era of #Earth360 exploration, using the tools of the digital age and Internet connectivity, is making it possible to see a connected, whole Planet Earth and to begin studying life-enabling systems (and life-threatening changes) as with means never before possible. Space- and earth-based observation platforms are delivering "intelligence reports" in effect, strategic insights that can broaden our knowledge and perceptions of who we are and how we respond to our global, common future.

In unprecedented ways, intelligence about our planet's systems can be shared and networked via the worldwide web and larger Internet linking us whatever our nation and wherever our community.

We look out at a critical, developing field of #EnvironmentalSecurity as a generation of Planet Citizen voyagers.

  • PlanetCitizen holds a simple value proposition:
  • Cleaner air and water and food is a good thing. Reducing pollution is a necessary thing. Health of our environment is a vital thing.

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An API for the Planet #PlanetLabs @Open Source Conference

With the Planet-Lab Platform, Connect to our Planet as Citizens of the Planet

Mission: Democratizing Access to Information About the Changing Planet

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Planet Labs/NYT Planet Labs, newly #ISS deployed Doves Smartphones in space!

Launch of new Flock of Dove Satellites to Image Earth Doves fly Doves flock

Planet Labs 'Dove' micro-satellites [2]

"Rapid cadence imagery, like Planet Labs is developing, helps us become better, more sustainable stewards of Earth."

Planet Labs Planet Labs Pulse [3] [4] [5]

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Environmental Security @Strategic Demands

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21st Century definitions of national and international security

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A realization that "Security is indivisible" is on the horizon and security definitions are changing as a result of the dynamics of interactive networks.

The sharing of information is creating a new science of networking. Information is being looked at as never before and #earthscience data is now being collected by networked computers across an interconnected world. In historic ways, open data is being publicly distributed far beyond the restrictive policies of previous times and closed-loop systems.

Today #earthsciences are at the cusp of a rich new world of information. As we share these new realizations, images, data, experiences and understandings, we can be certain of a new, growing awareness of our planet and our 'citizenship' together.

Even now, we have inklings of what is coming. Let's look at one called OCO-2. With the launch of OCO-2, a "game changer", in the summer of 2014, the data of #Earth360 will grow in unprecedented ways as this first orbiting observatory of global warming conditions takes to space and begins to report home - I am OCO-2

Although the Orbiting Carbon Observatory is just the beginning, the future of #earthobserving is here as we see in new ways and observe our environment with new information never before accessible. Space-imaging is opening up amazing views, with 3D and big-screens and home theaters. Coming soon will be views beyond IMAX as companies like Virgin and SpaceX carry citizen travelers into orbit. Educational and scientific information about our communities is being shared, and linked to, and distributed around the Net. From space, the earth is borderless and with vision of the planet as a common #biosphere and #ecosystem comes responsibility for our shared security.

Onto first steps... We are all connected and wherever we are, geographically, nationally, we share a common ground. Let's look at our home and with an 'overview' from space, see the 'Big Picture' and let's look at the details, let's manage and sustain our earth resources and, as we go, look to our shared quality of life onboard the "only home we've ever known."

Here's to our future and future of #Environmental Security


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The Big Picture: Earth from Space

The world of space is a world in flux. The term "New Space" has come to represent a first generation of start ups that are designing, building and launching small, mini- and micro-satellites. New players are challenging the old system of governments that spend billions to explore, commercialize and militarize space. Barriers to entry are being broken and start-up companies are launching flocks of satellite birds into space. Earth monitoring is going planetary and nextgen companies are at the forefront, even as the "old" establishment is shifting to address threats to the environment.

Let's go there to this new world, not a 'new world order' but a world that is being connected and is sharing, linking and seeing the bigger picture. The way we observe and 'feel' about our planet is changing in one generation.

Beginning with the first Whole Earth pictures relayed from the Apollo voyages to the Moon, we have for the first time in history experienced a vision of our planet from afar -- we are, we realize, a 'blue' oasis in space.

Now, thirty+ years after the Apollo images of #planetearth360 returned, we find everyday "citizens of the planet" planning to go into space and a new generation of New Space mini-sats sending full-spectrum imaging back with an array of new views of our planet. Apollo's famous iconic images are being enhanced with new ways of seeing and experiencing our planet -- and opening new possibilities to secure our environment for ages to come.

Let's start by looking at an astro-space establishment, the images of earth and data about earth being sent back from space by established multi-billion dollar companies/ government companies and 'New Space' companies that are now on radar and reporting back with multi-spectra #Earth360 data.

Start with NEX, NASA's version of crowdsourcing... NASA's social media experiment. Ready? Are you interested in using your digital skills to help the government/NASA with environmental security? Perhaps you might start here - The NEX Challenge

Add your talent to the grand project of seeing with an EarthPOV -- so that we can make informed decisions and policy... [6]

Observe, consider, act - "The Big Picture"

NextGen #earthscience in an era of #climatechange and #globalsecurity threats...

Join up with GreenPolicy360 and share our GreenLinks and GP360 Open Data. Time to get going -- planet citizens @work

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Earth Right Now

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August 2014

Citizens of planet earth typically watch meteor showers by looking up. But this remarkable view, captured on 8/13/11 by astronaut Ron Garan, caught a Perseid meteor by looking down. From Garan's perspective onboard the ISS orbiting at an altitude of about 380 kilometers, the Perseid meteors streak below. The glowing comet dust grains are traveling at about 60 kilometers per second through the denser atmosphere around 100 kilometers above Earth's surface. -- SETI Institute [7]

Lettuce in space [8] Come to think of it - Where is Bruce Dern these days? Silent Running and...

Douglas Trumbull's VFX vision in Silent Running and beyond continues on in our memory banks [9] [10] [11] [12]


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Environmental Security

PlanetCitizen, a forward-looking vision for "Greening our Blue Planet"

#PlanetCitizen

#EarthPOV

#EnvironmentalSecurity