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hen the first Earthrise was televised just
over 50 years ago, we humans saw what a fragile,
shimmering bauble it is we cling to. Since then,
images snapped in space and from satellites
keep us updated on the biosphere’s progress
under what, it has to be said, is our poor
stewardship to date.
Consider the public and political outcry over
the recent Amazon fires. Earth observation (EO)
satellite data provided enough powerful authority
to move public opinion, create new policies and,
hopefully, it will also ultimately help better
manage land use. Such valuable satellite images
are also providing timely evidence of a plethora
of land use changes that will help citizens and
governments act to achieve the UN Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs).
To support action on sustainable development
and climate change, EO data are being transformed
into useful tools and services. According to Dmitry
Shchepashchenko, an IIASA Ecosystems Services
and Management Program researcher and coauthor of a comprehensive paper overviewing
the new tools and services available to land
watchers, the challenge is interpreting this
overwhelming flow of data accurately.
“We use very high resolution (VHR) satellite
imagery to keep an eye on Earth. The more free
imagery is available, the better we can monitor
and alert,” he says.
Low orbit is now filled with what are basically
high-resolution cameras that are recording the
planet’s changing patterns and informing us how
Earth is being transformed moment to moment.
The cost of acquiring these images has also been
radically reduced since the 1970s and many are
available to users at no cost.
A turn of the century engineering challenge
– to fit a satellite in a box the size of a hand-sized
FOR CLUES TO EARTH’S
FATE, LOOK TO THE
EYES IN SPACE
Satellite-based Earth observation
is an important source of baseline
information when developing
global models of land use and land
use change. IIASA researchers are
at the vanguard of interpreting a
new flood of this data for clues to
our survival.
W
16 Options www.iiasa.ac.atWinter
2019/20
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Buch options, Band winter 2019"
options
Band winter 2019
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2019
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine