Mangroves are prominent along the northwest coast of Australia. The first image collected by Landsat 9, on Oct. 31, 2021, shows mangroves clustered in protected inlets and bays on the edge of the Indian Ocean. Fluffy cumulus clouds and high-altitude cirrus clouds hover nearby. The aqua colors of the shallow near-shore waters give way to the deep, dark blues of the ocean. Credits: NASA
Landsat 9, a joint mission between NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS) that launched Sept. 27, 2021, has collected its first light images of
Earth.
The images, all acquired Oct. 31, are available online. They provide a preview of how the mission will help people manage
vital natural resources and understand the impacts of climate change, adding to
Landsat’s unparalleled data record that spans nearly 50 years of space-based
Earth observation.
“Landsat 9’s first images capture critical
observations about our changing planet and will advance this joint mission of
NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey that provides critical data about Earth's
landscapes and coastlines seen from space,” said NASA Administrator Bill
Nelson. “This program has the proven power to not only improve lives but also
save lives. NASA will continue to work with USGS to strengthen and improve
accessibility to Landsat data so decision makers in America – and around the
world – better understand the devastation of the climate crisis, manage
agricultural practices, preserve precious resources and respond more
effectively to natural disasters.”
These first light images shows Detroit, Michigan, with
neighboring Lake St. Clair, the intersection of cities and beaches along a
changing Florida coastline and images from Navajo Country in Arizona that will
add to the wealth of data helping us monitor crop health and manage irrigation
water. The new images also provided data about the changing landscapes of the
Himalayas in High Mountain Asia and the coastal islands and shorelines of
Northern Australia.
Landsat 9 is similar in design to its predecessor, Landsat 8, which was
launched in 2013 and remains in orbit, but features several improvements. The
new satellite transmits data with higher radiometric resolution back down to
Earth, allowing it to detect more subtle differences, especially over darker
areas like water or dense forests. For example, Landsat 9 can differentiate
more than 16,000 shades of a given wavelength color; Landsat 7, the satellite
being replaced, detects only 256 shades. This increased sensitivity will allow
Landsat users to see much more subtle changes than ever before.
Landsat 9 carries two instruments designed to work together to capture a broad range of wavelengths: the Operational Land Imager 2 and the Thermal Infrared Sensor 2. Data from both instruments are shown in this image. Credits: NASA
“First light is a big milestone for
Landsat users – it’s the first chance to really see the kind of quality that
Landsat 9 provides. And they look fantastic,” said Jeff Masek NASA’s Landsat 9
project scientist at Goddard Space Flight Center. “When we have Landsat 9
operating in coordination with Landsat 8, it’s going to be this wealth of data,
allowing us to monitor changes to our home planet every eight days.”
Landsat 9 carries two instruments that capture
imagery: the Operational Land Imager 2 (OLI-2), which detects visible,
near-infrared and shortwave-infrared light in nine wavelengths, and the Thermal
Infrared Sensor 2 (TIRS-2), which detects thermal radiation in two wavelengths
to measure Earth’s surface temperatures and its changes.
These instruments will provide Landsat 9 users with
essential information about crop health, irrigation use, water quality,
wildfire severity, deforestation, glacial retreat, urban expansion, and more.
“The data and images from Landsat 9 are expanding our
capability to see how Earth has changed over decades”, said Karen St. Germain,
Earth Science Division director at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “In a
changing climate, continuous and free access to Landsat data, and the other
data in NASA’s Earth observing fleet, helps data users, including city
planners, farmers and scientists, plan for the future.”
NASA’s Landsat 9 team is conducting a 100-day
check-out period that involves testing the satellite’s systems and subsystems
and calibrating its instruments in preparation for handing the mission over to
USGS in January. USGS will operate Landsat 9 along with Landsat 8, and together
the two satellites will collect approximately 1,500 images of Earth’s surface
every day, covering the globe every eight days.
“The incredible first pictures from the Landsat 9
satellite are a glimpse into the data that will help us make science-based
decisions on key issues including water use, wildfire impacts, coral reef
degradation, glacier and ice-shelf retreat and tropical deforestation,”
said USGS Acting Director Dr. David Applegate. “This historic moment is the
culmination of our long partnership with NASA on Landsat 9’s development,
launch and initial operations, which will better support environmental
sustainability, climate change resiliency and economic growth – all while
expanding an unparalleled record of Earth's changing landscapes.”
Landsat 9 data will be available to the public, for
free, from USGS’s website once the satellite begins normal operations.
NASA manages the Landsat 9 mission development. Teams
from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, also built and
tested the TIRS-2 instrument. NASA’s Launch Services Program, based at the
agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, managed the mission’s launch. The
USGS Earth Resources Observation and Science (EROS) Center will operate the
mission and manage the ground system, including maintaining the Landsat
archive. Ball Aerospace in Boulder, Colorado, built and tested the OLI-2
instrument. United Launch Alliance is the rocket provider for Landsat 9’s
launch. Northrop Grumman in Gilbert, Arizona, built the Landsat 9 spacecraft,
integrated it with instruments, and tested it.
For more information on Landsat 9 and the Landsat
program, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/Landsat9
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-usgs-release-first-landsat-9-images
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