Telling a Pine from a Maple . . .
from Space!
To make future Earth images from space even better, a special spacecraft, called Earth Observing-1 (EO-1), will be launched in October 2000. EO-1 will test some very advanced new instruments. One, called the Hyperion, will be exquisitely sensitive to tiny differences in colors. It is so sensitive that when its data are processed by computers, we will be able to see clearly where one kind of tree ends and another begins!
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EO-1 will fly right behind Landsat 7 and take pictures of the same areas at almost the same times. This way, the images from the new EO-1 instruments can be compared with the images the current Landsat instruments give.
| This image was made from data collected by instruments on the current Landsat satellite.
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| This is an image of that same area that can be made from data collected by EO-1's Hyperion.
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| Besides sorting out trees, Landsat images show how the land changes over time. Cities growing, rain forests and farm lands shrinking, more or less rain falling, rivers flooding, wildfires burning, volcanos erupting--their effects show plainly in Landsat pictures of the same area taken at different times.
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Picture by Laurel Dogger, age 9, Silver Spring, Maryland | |
By sending our much-improved technological "eyes" into space, we are able to understand and take better care of our home, planet Earth. |
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