TERRA IS NOW OPERATIONAL:


The ESE era opened with the successful launch of Terra on December 18, 1999. After a period of degassing the spacecraft and instrument readiness, data began to be taken in February, 2000. All onboard worked perfectly. Terra is now the pivotal spacecraft to demonstrate the concept of making many kinds of measurements with multisensors at the same time, so that correlative data pertaining to a wide range of natural phenomena in the Earth�s “spheres” will allow testing of the concept of an Earth System - a network of interrelated and interacting physicochemical and biological processes which tend to affect one another in feedback loops. This page looks at results from the MODIS and MISR sensors on Terra.


TERRA IS NOW OPERATIONAL:

MODIS and MISR

The EOS-Terra logo.

Terra, formerly EOS-AM-1, was successfully launched on December 18, 1999. Thus commences one of the most ambitious and important programs of the space era, in view of its goal to obtain a variety of data sets simultaneously as a means of conducting integrated environmental studies on a near-global scale. After several months of orbit adjustments, instrument degassing, and other preparatory actions, acquisition of preliminary data from the the ASTER, CERES, and MOPITT sensors began in early February with the last two, MODIS and MISR, activated on February 24, 2000.

An artist’s sketch of Terra was included on page 16-7. Here, we show the actual spacecraft (3.5 m [11 ft] high) in its “clean room” facility before it was shipped to the Vandenburg (Calif.) Air Force Base Western Launch Facility for mounting on an Atlas IIAS rocket.

The actual spacecraft, Terra, near readiness for shipping to the California launch site.

The images that follow are among the first obtained and have not been corrected - calibrations up to that point had not been completed. As new and more informative images are placed online on the Terra Home Page, a few of these will be added to this Tutorial page, perhaps replacing these now shown. Also, as the principal investigators gain familiarity with handling and interpreting Terra results, important findings will be reported on that Page. Each of the instruments described below have their own Home Pages, with many more illustrations and scientific results; specifically: MODIS; MISR: ASTER; MOPITT: CERES.

MODIS and MISR

The first is part of a MODIS image set that includes the Mississippi Delta and the Gulf of Mexico. This is a natural color version.

One of the first MODIS images, centered on the Mississippi Delta of Louisiana.

By combining swath images from different successive orbits (close in time) much larger areas, such as this covering the U.S. and adjacent parts of North America, can be imaged:

All of the continental U.S. with cloud cover, imaged by MODIS.

MODIS data allow calculation of the “NDVI” parameter (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, obtained by dividing a Near IR minus Red radiance by a Near IR + Red value) and sea surface temperatures, as displayed here:

A Normalized Difference Vegetation Index map for early spring in the U.S. calculated from MODIS data.

The color green has been assigned to land vegetation - in this case (in early April) for areas in the early stages of the green wave; yellows depict lower amounts of vegetation (low productivity). In the oceans, green and blue are cool whereas yellow and orange are warm.

One of the important EOS joint study programs is the Indian Ocean Experiment. The next image is a MODIS oblique view (constructed with the aid of elevation data) of part of the Indian subcontinent, with the Himalayas and Tibet Plateau in the background (top), shown in approximate natural color:

MODIS imagery can be converted to oblique or perspective views of large areas, using DEM-like topographic data: Here is a view of much of India with the Himalayas (somewhat exaggerated relief) near the top.

Other wavelengths on MODIS aid in picking up the atmospheric appearance of aerosols, much being the result of pollution:

Same region in India, with aerosol data shown pictorially.|

And, MODIS can pick out water vapor, even when heavy clouds are absent or dispersed, as shown in this image:

Same region in India, with water vapor data expressed as clouds.

MODIS can also use its short wavelength bands to measure the fluorescent properties of the ocean, which relate to plankton content. Light not used in photosynthesis is re-emitted as fluorescence and heat, so that higher levels of fluorescence indicate lower photosynthetic activity. This is evidenced in this image (red is highest amount that includes Africa, Saudi Arabia, Iran, India and Pakistan, and parts of the Indian Ocean and the Bay of Bengal:

Imaged land around the Indian Ocean, and plot of fluorescence in the ocean waters using an ultraviolet band on MODIS.

Other MODIS wavebands in the visible are suited to picking out chlorophyll content (similar approach as SeaWIFS, page 14-13), with reds being high and blues low concentrations.

Same region in which MODIS visible bands are used to map chlorophyll response in the Indian Ocean as a guide to plankton distribution.

Imagery from sequences of swath widths over short time spans can be combined for MODIS, and several of the other instruments on Terra, to produce images that seem to cover a terrestrial hemisphere, much as is seen by GOES and other geostationary satellites. Thus:

Reconstructed image of hemisphere of Earth using MODIS data.|

By integrating information collected over several days, global maps showing surface reflectances and sea surface temperature variations can be constructed, like the one below that covers a time period in late March. The white shades are mostly snow cover, but can be clouds.

Temperature variations in the Earth�s oceans, determined by MODIS.

These surface reflectances are suited to calculating NDVI values for the entire global land surface, as shown here:

An NDVI map of vegetation on the continents of Earth.

Turning to the next Terra instrument, the MISR spectroradiometer produces multiangle images over short time intervals. There are 9 separate cameras that look out at different angles. Swath widths are 400 km (250 miles) and resolution in a vertical (straight down) image is 275 m (894 feet). Other resolutions, commandable from the ground, are 550 and 1100 meters.

Thus, slightly different images result when the camera array captures a scene over a range of angles . This is exemplified by these three views of James Bay, off the southern Hudson Bay in Canada. This example actually shows the first scene taken and processed when Terra’s instruments started gathering data. The left view is a forward image; the center is a nadir image; and the right is from an aft camera. This scene size took 7 minutes to acquire by scanning as the spacecraft moved south.

The first scene taken by the MISR multiangle spectroradiometer,

showing three views of James Bay in Canada.|

An interesting “trick” can be done with three images from cameras looking at different angles: They can be combined as a color composite. The image pair below shows on the left a single nadir image of the James Bay just examined. In the right display a forward camera view is projected through blue, the nadir image through green, and an aft image through red. Different resulting colors separate snow and ice (smooth is blue; rough is orange) from clouds (purple).

Same James Bay scene, now made into a color composite by combining three MISR views at different angles using color filters.

To illustrate the benefit of looking simultaneously at an area from multiple angles, consider these four views of part of the Appalachians; because of the more oblique look angle the image farthest to the right shows an aerosol haze that is absent from the nadir and close-in images.

Four strips of MISR imagery, taken at different angles, covering the

central Applachians; note haze effect in view on right.|

This MISR scene shows a vertical (nadir) view of the coastline of northern Australia, not far from the Pilbara district we looked at in Section 6, page 6-15. This true color image, using the blue, green, and red bands shows the Joseph Bonaparte Gulf, the manmade inland Lake Argyle, and the Ord River. Although this part of Australia is tropical in vegetation, the effects of the underlying complex geologic structure is expressed topographically.

MISR image of the north coast of Australia.

By combining a MISR image with (digitized) topographic map elevations, views that are perspective can be derived. This image shows northern India, the Himalayan mountains, and the Tibetan Plateau beyond.

A MISR view of the Himalaya Mountains and Tibetan Plateau, converted into a relief perspective.

On the next page we will examine images from the remaining three Terra Instruments.


Primary Contact: Nicholas M. Short, Sr. email: nmshort@nationi.net

Dr. Mitchell K. Hobish, Consultant (mkh@sciential.com)