File proveniente da Wikimedia Commons. Clicca per visitare la pagina originale

File:Approaching the Larsen Ice Shelf.jpg

Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera.
Vai alla navigazione Vai alla ricerca

File originale(2 889 × 1 905 pixel, dimensione del file: 2,04 MB, tipo MIME: image/jpeg)

Logo di Commons
Logo di Commons
Questo file e la sua pagina di descrizione (discussione · modifica) si trovano su Wikimedia Commons (?)
Descrizione
English: An AirSAR 2004 view from the DC-8 as it approaches the Larsen Ice Shelf, which is part of the Antarctic Peninsula.

An AirSAR 2004 view from the DC-8 as it approaches the Larsen Ice Shelf, which is part of the Antarctic Peninsula. AirSAR 2004 is a three-week expedition in Central and South America by an international team of scientists that is using an all-weather imaging tool, called the Airborne Synthetic Aperture Radar (AirSAR), located onboard NASA's DC-8 airborne laboratory. Scientists from many parts of the world are combining ground research with NASA's AirSAR technology to improve and expand on the quality of research they are able to conduct. These photos are from the DC-8 aircraft while flying an AirSAR mission over Antarctica. The Antarctic Peninsula is more similar to Alaska and Patagonia than to the rest of the Antarctic continent. It is drained by fast glaciers, receives abundant precipitation, and melts significantly in the summer months. In recent decades, the Peninsula has experienced significant atmospheric warming (about 2 degrees C since 1950), which has triggered a vast and spectacular retreat of its floating ice shelves, glacier reduction, a decrease in permanent snow cover and a lengthening of the melt season. As a result, the contribution to sea level from this region could be rapid and substantial. With an area of 120,000 km, or ten times the Patagonia ice fields, the Peninsula could contribute as much as 0.4mm/yr sea level rise, which would be the largest single contribution to sea level from anywhere in the world. This region is being studied by NASA using a DC-8 equipped with the Airborne Synthetic Aperture Radar developed by scientists from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. AirSAR will provide a baseline model and unprecedented mapping of the region. This data will make it possible to determine whether the warming trend is slowing, continuing or accelerating. AirSAR will also provide reliable information on ice shelf thickness to measure the contribution of the glaciers to sea level.

AirSAR collects multi-frequency and multi-polarization radar data for a variety of science applications. It also acquires data in interferometric modes, providing topographic information (cross-track mode) or ocean current information (along-track interferometry). This March 2004 deployment was planned to:

  • Study the extent and distribution of archeological Mayan civilization (using foliage-penetrating radar)
  • Study the glaciers of Patagonia and the Antarctic peninsula
  • Investigate new techniques for the measurement of the forest structure of dense tropical forests
  • Fill in the largest "void" in the SRTM-derived map of South American topography
  • Collect additional data for various research initiatives
    During the deployment data is collected over Central and South America and Antarctica. During the approximately 100 flight hours, AirSAR is acquiring polarimetric and/or interferometric data along a 20,000 km track, or about 200,000 sq. km of data over 40 sites for 30 scientists. AirSAR will collect data related to the following NASA Code YS science programs:
  • Cryospheric Science
  • Land Cover/Land Use Change
  • Natural Hazards
  • Physical Oceanography
  • Terrestrial Ecology
  • Hydrology
    NASA used a DC-8 aircraft as a flying science laboratory. The platform aircraft, was based at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, Calif., collected data for many experiments in support of scientific projects serving the world scientific community. Included in this community were NASA, federal, state, academic and foreign investigators. Data gathered by the DC-8 at flight altitude and by remote sensing has been used for scientific studies in archeology, ecology, geography, hydrology, meteorology, oceanography, volcanology, atmospheric chemistry, soil science and biology.
Data
Fonte NASA Photo Number: ED04-0056-110
Autore NASA Photo by: Jim Ross


Questa immagine o filmato è stato catalogato dal
Armstrong Flight Research Center
della
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) degli Stati Uniti d'Americacon il Photo ID: ED04-0056-110.

Questo tag non indica lo status del copyright dell'opera ad esso associato. È quindi richiesto un normale tag di copyright. Vedi Commons:Licenze per maggiori informazioni.
Altre lingue:
Public domain Questo file è nel pubblico dominio perché creato dalla NASA. La politica sul copyright della NASA afferma che «il materiale della NASA non è protetto da copyright a meno che non sia specificato altrimenti». (NASA copyright policy e JPL Image Use Policy).
Attenzione:

Didascalie

Aggiungi una brevissima spiegazione di ciò che questo file rappresenta

Elementi ritratti in questo file

raffigura

image/jpeg

1f917fe10f508129cf56ad74168b23d8dc2884bf

2 143 687 byte

1 905 pixel

2 889 pixel

Cronologia del file

Fare clic su un gruppo data/ora per vedere il file come si presentava nel momento indicato.

Data/OraMiniaturaDimensioniUtenteCommento
attuale11:21, 8 lug 2008Miniatura della versione delle 11:21, 8 lug 20082 889 × 1 905 (2,04 MB)Finavoncaption cropped
20:50, 13 gen 2007Miniatura della versione delle 20:50, 13 gen 20072 889 × 2 400 (2,23 MB)Uwe W.An AirSAR 2004 view from the DC-8 as it approaches the Larsen Ice Shelf, which is part of the Antarctic Peninsula. Photo Number: ED04-0056-110<br> Photo Date: March 13, 2004<br> Formats: 578x480 JPEG Image (141 KBytes)<br> 1233x1024 JPEG Image

La seguente pagina usa questo file:

Utilizzo globale del file

Anche i seguenti wiki usano questo file:

Metadati