In addition to being a freelance space writer, I am a remote sensing specialist who has been involved in a number of space-related projects funded by the US Department of Defense and, more recently, NASA over the last three decades of my professional career. In celebration of Earth Day, I wanted to share some of the best images I have created of our home world. Some of these images are anaglyphic stereo views so have your 3D glasses ready, Gentle Readers.
3D View of a Thunderstorm over the Congo – Apollo 6 (April 4, 1968)
While I was preparing an article on NASA’s unmanned Apollo 6 test flight of the Saturn V a few years back, I came across a series of overlapping images of the Earth taken from the spacecraft while it was in its 173×357-kilometer parking orbit following launch on April 4, 1968 (see “Apollo 6: The Saturn V That Almost Failed”). A Maurer Model 220-G 70 mm camera fitted with a 76 mm lens was mounted on the crew hatch window of the Command Module to take photographs of the Earth passing below to assess the use of landmarks as a navigation aid while coasting in a parking orbit. Among these images were a pair of overlapping views of an afternoon thunderstorm over the Congo. Using software tools I had on hand to support my scientific work on stereo remote sensing, I could not resist processing these images into the 3D view shown below.
3D View of the Boston Area – Skylab 3 (September 3, 1973)
When I was a young space enthusiast growing up in the 1970s, I longed to see images of my home north of Boston taken from space especially the high quality images snapped by NASA’s astronauts while in Earth orbit. It was not until the launch of NASA’s Skylab into its high inclination orbit in May 1973 that astronauts were able to take such photographs – and it would years to decades later still before I would stumble upon them. Using my work-related software tools, I processed a series of overlapping photographs taken on September 21, 1973 during the Skylab 3 mission using the sextet of film cameras on the S190A Skylab Multispectral Experiment to produce a stereo view of the Boston area (for more details, see “Pictures of Home from Skylab”).
3D Views of Mt. Whitney – ARES (October 5, 1996) & ISS (August 13, 2018)
From the mid-1990s until its cancellation in 2004, I was a member of the American science team for a joint American-Russian program called RAMOS (Russian American Observation Satellites). Among the scientific objectives of the project was to acquire stereo data of atmospheric phenomena at wavelengths ranging from the infrared to the ultraviolet to create an improved 3D database for a variety of defense and science-related applications. As a prelude to this mission, the American and Russian partners performed a series of joint observation campaigns to make stereo observations of clouds using existing air and space-based assets. Among these was a campaign to make observations of the region around Mt. Whitney in California on October 5, 1996 using a modified WB-57F flown by NASA and the USAF for the ARES (Airborne Remote Earth Sensing) program and a Russian Resurs-O1 remote sensing satellite. Unfortunately, there were no clouds in the region that day but I was able to use the sequence of video camera context images to make a 3D reconstruction of the mountain itself shown below.
By coincidence, Mt. Whitney was observed again in a sequence of images taken 23 years later by the crew of the International Space Station (ISS) in support of the CyMISS (Tropical Cyclone Intensity Measurements from the ISS) project for which I was the Principal Investigator at the time. Although the primary target of my observations were the marine cloud layer off the coast of California as well the smoke plumes from the wildfires present on August 13, 2018, I could not help but notice the clouds around Mt. Whitney and created the stereo view shown below (for more details, see “Clouds Over Mt. Whitney – A 23-Year Tale of 3D Remote Sensing”).
Mt. Erebus – MSX/Resurs-O1 (December 23, 1996) & MSTI-3 (March 2, 1997)
Another joint campaign in preparation for the RAMOS program involved observations of Antarctica’s Mt. Erebus (see “RAMOS: The Russian-American Observation Satellites”). Using images taken the UVISI imager on the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization’s (BMDO’s) MSX (Midcourse Space Experiment) satellite and the MSU-E push-broom imager on the Russian Resurs-O1 on December 23, 1996, I was able to create a 3D reconstruction of Mt. Erebus much as I had done a couple of months earlier for Mt. Whitney.
To supplement these observations, additional images of Mt. Erebus were secured by other satellites in the months to come. Among my personal favorites was a false-color mosaic I created using SWIR (Short Wave Infrared) and MWIR (Mid-Wave Infrared) images acquired by the BMDO-sponsored MSTI-3 (Miniature Sensor Technology Integration-3) satellite on March 2, 1997. The way I constructed this false color mosaic, open water appears blue, the bare ground is white and snow-covered areas are various shades of brown. The heat from the volcano’s caldera shows up as a bright point at the summit of Mt. Erebus.
3D View of Super Typhoon Atsani – ISS (August 19, 2015)
Following the cancellation of the joint RAMOS program in 2004, members of the project’s American science team (including myself) continued our interest in selected RAMOS experiments which showed promise to solve key meteorological problems. One of those experiments eventually evolved into the CyMISS (Tropical Cyclone Intensity Measurements from the ISS) project for which I was the Principal Investigator starting in 2017. Funded by CASIS (Center for the Advancement of Science in Space) which manages the ISS US National Laboratory for NASA, the goal of the project (which ran from 2014 to the end of 2019) was to acquire image sequences of intense tropical cyclones (TCs), such as hurricanes, from the ISS using a specially written photography protocol to support the development of an improved remote sensing method to characterize more accurately the strength of these destructive storms using stereoscopy.
One of the side benefits of our investigations was the creation of some spectacular pseudo-stereo images of intense TCs from around the globe. One of the earliest, fully successful observation runs of the project also turned out to be among the most spectacular. Shown below are some views of the Category 4 Super Typhoon Atsani located in the western part of the North Pacific at about 152.7° E, 18.7° N as seen from the ISS on August 19, 2015 (for more details see “CyMISS Image of the Month: Super Typhoon Atsani in 3D”). First is a video showing a selection of images taken by the crew of the ISS of the storm followed by reconstructed 2D and 3D images.
View of Solar Eclipse from Orbit – GOES 13 (August 21, 2017)
Like millions of other people across the US, I watched the progress of the solar eclipse on August 21, 2017. Naturally, I could not resist observing the eclipse from space as well as from my home north of Boston. Below is a video I created from images acquired by the now-retired GOES-13 satellite (then taking up the “GOES-East” position) showing the shadow of the Moon moving across North American (see “GOES Video of Solar Eclipse – August 21, 2017”).
Tropical Depression Alberto by Moonlight – ISS (May 30, 2018)
During the course of the CyMISS project, our team also investigated the practicality of nighttime photography of TCs from orbit using moonlight as the source of illumination. One of the more spectacular views was acquired by the crew of ISS on May 30, 2018 during a nighttime overpass of the US to observe Tropical Depression Alberto as it dumped rain on the southern states a day and a half after making landfall (for more details, see “CyMISS Image of the Month: Alberto by Moonlight from the ISS”). First is a short video created from the color image sequence showing the storm (and its many lightning strikes) with the glow of lights from major American cities visible from below followed by a mosaic created from those images.
Powerful Lightning Strike in the Pacific – ISS (July 31, 2018)
For our second successful nighttime observation session, the crew of the ISS acquired a sequence of photographs of Post-Tropical Cyclone Gilma in the central Pacific Ocean on July 31, 2018 (see “CyMISS Image of the Month: ISS View of a Powerful Pacific Lightning Strike”). While examining the individual images from this sequence, I spotted a spectacular lightning strike created by this weakening tropical cyclone that occurred at 11:20:25 GMT. Below is a processed closeup view of this lightning strike.
3D View of Typhoon Soulik – ISS (August 21, 2018)
Among the more incredible views obtained during the course of the CyMISS program was of the Category 2 Typhoon Soulik on August 21, 2018. Located at about 30.2° N, 128.0° E in the western Pacific when observed by the crew of the ISS, Soulik sported a huge 50 by 100 kilometer eye containing a lot of cloud structure at a range of altitudes. Given the viewing geometry during this overpass, the image scale of the original ISS photographs was about 60 meters per pixel making this the highest resolution stereo view of a storm eye observed during the CyMISS project (see ”CyMISS Image of the Month: A 3D View of Typhoon Soulik from the ISS”).
Sunrise over Hurricane Florence – ISS (September 14, 2018)
The last image I wanted to share here is a view of Hurricane Florence on September 14, 2018 just as it was making landfall in North Carolina. Taken by the crew of the ISS at 11:41:15 GMT (7:41:15 AM EDT) about 50 minutes after local sunrise, this beautiful, hand-processed image was acquired using a handheld Nikon D5 camera to provide supplemental photographs of this historic storm to complement the image sequence taken using our photography protocol (which did not provide a full view of the storm, for more details see “CyMISS Image of the Month: Sunrise over Hurricane Florence”).
I hope you enjoyed this selection of images and Happy Earth Day!
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Related Reading
For more images from the CyMISS project, see the CyMISS Page.
Wonderful browsing of spectacular imaging.
Could you also post side-by-side stereograms, either for cross-eye viewing on monitors or spread-eye viewing on smartphones? Thanks.