. Earth Science News .
Seeing The Big Picture

On July 15, 2004, the Aura spacecraft became the newest of NASA's Earth-observing satellites. Image credit: NASA.
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 09, 2005
Were you ever told you needed to step back and see the whole picture? Looking at Earth from space provides a perspective only dreamed about until the dawn of the Space Age. From that lofty viewpoint, an almost inconceivable amount of information flows from satellites that provide insight to better understand our planet.

The largest scientific data system in the world - the Earth Observing System Data and Information System (EOSDIS) - collects environmental measurements from more than 30 satellites, such as NASA's Terra, Aqua, Aura and ICESat. The volume of data about our environment collected by these constant observers is truly amazing.

To get some perspective, think of the largest library in the world: the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. Its collection consists of nearly 128 million items on approximately 530 miles of bookshelves. This massive library contains 29 million books and other printed materials, 2.7 million recordings, 12 million photographs, 4.8 million maps and 57 million manuscripts.

As massive as that sounds, the scientific data from EOSDIS could fill the Library of Congress 300 times.

In other terms, it is the equivalent of a DVD movie with a running time of more than 160 years - with what would amount to 66 additional days of running time being added daily.

Each day, these satellites produce images of the entire surface of the Earth and three-dimensional information reaching from the base of our atmosphere up beyond the stratosphere. From their perspective, they are able to capture amazing geological events and build a database that allows scientists to map the changes in our planet's environment.

But just how is all this information used?

The system provides unprecedented access to a diverse, worldwide group of more than 17,000 users. They consist of researchers, federal, state and local governments, teachers, museums, the commercial remote-sensing community and the general public. Daily, these users draw on this information at an astounding rate (using the DVD movie example, it would equal 1,056 hours of running time).

The availability and access to this information is leading to unprecedented studies of land, ice cover, oceans and atmosphere, according to Dr. Carl. A. Reber, EODIS project scientist. "The EOSDIS has been a boon to the Earth-science research community," he said.

While a 160-year-long movie would never be a top-selling DVD, the revealing perspective provided by our friendly observers in the sky will continue to help us see the "big picture" of planet Earth.

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