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EN_01169564_2043
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In the decade before the first Earth Day, our view of the planet was still fuzzy. Scientists and engineers of the 1960s were experimenting with satellites to see if and how they could be useful for meteorology and Earth science. Early space imagers were similar to black-and-white television cameras, and the resolution was crude because engineers were still figuring out how to gather, compress, and send data with radio signals. One giant leap for satellites came in 1965. One month after the launch of the ninth Television Infrared Observation Satellite (TIROS-IX), researchers from NASA, RCA, and the U.S. Weather Bureau assembled 450 satellite photos into the first global composite view of Earth. The image at the top of this page shows the cloud cover of the entire planet as it appeared to TIROS-IX on February 13, 1965. The satellite circled the Earth every two hours in a polar orbit and used its two cameras to collect 40 images of the sunlit side on each pass. The images were sent by radio signals to ground stations in Virginia and Alaska, then relayed and assembled in Washington, D.C. In a 1968 NASA history of early observations of Earth, the authors described the scene: A tropical storm can be seen over Ceylon and the southern tip of India, and another is over the south Indian Ocean. In the lower right, a storm is approaching the southern coast of Australia...The thin band of clouds extending from central North Africa across the Red Sea to Saudi Arabia indicates the location of the jet stream...The remnants of an old storm are indicated by the comma-shaped cloud array over the North Atlantic Ocean...A strong weather front is depicted by the clouds extending across the southeastern United States; another storm is moving into the northwestern United States from Canada. The importance of this picture lies in the fact that it provides the meteorologist with weather information over the entire Earth, whereas conventional observations before satellites provided informatio
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arch17
1902-01-01
NASA/Sipa USA/East News
Sipa USA
Sipa USA
sipausa_15205306
0,48MB
16cm x 9cm przy 300dpi
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