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Atlas of Worldwide Light Pollution

mgarraha writes: "Researchers at the University of Padua and NOAA have analyzed DMSP data to produce a new atlas of night sky brightness due to artificial lighting. Previous maps only showed the distribution of light sources. Their paper will appear in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Here is an AP article."

3 of 234 comments (clear)

  1. compare light to population by jonbrewer · · Score: 4, Informative


    Compare light to population and no one should wonder why the US is the biggest polluter in the world. Put together the light intensity of China, India, and Indonesia, and you've got half the population of the world, yet they still put off less light than the NorthEast corridor of the US. That's 3,000,000,000 people to 60,000,000.

  2. DMSP earthlights image by jmorzins · · Score: 4, Informative
    Some of these satellite photos are really fun. One of my favorites also uses data from the Defense Meteorological Satellites Program (DMSP). They spent months taking pictures of the night time earth, and assembled a beautiful composite image of all light-emitting sources on the earth's surface.

    It's a map of light sources, and shows some really interesting structures. The Nile is much brighter than the rest of Egypt, the central U.S. is a grid of cities, and there's a railroad stretching across Russia to the Pacific Ocean.

    A small version of the image was an astronomy picture of the day last November (http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap001127.html), and a larger version of the image is also available (http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0011/earth lights_dmsp_big.jpg). There's a short writeup at http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Study/Lights/.

  3. Re:Why the line in USA? by Imperator · · Score: 4, Informative
    Why is there this very straight line right down the middle of the US where the east side is very bright, but the west side is very dark by comparison? I might understand if that was where the Rockies started, but to my knowlege it's not. Does anyone know what this line signifies?
    That line is a bit west of the Mississippi River. The American conquest and subsequent resettlement of North America was a movement westward. At one point, a wave of settlers stopped just beyond the river, which is a major navigable thoroughfare even today. Too far west of the Mississippi, travel became much harder. Established settlements were few and far between. Food and other supplies were hard to obtain. The American Indians still had yet to be told that they had forfeited their lands, and did not wish to surrender their nomadic patterns of life. All in all, the West was not hostpitable to Americans until they reached the coast. If you look at a map of US states, you'll see that the Western ones tend to be large and often appear to have been created by bureaucrats. The dark area of the US really is comparatively unpopulated.
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