all plumes exaggerated 20x 20191216

Date Captured:12/16/19Summary:Exaggerated (20x) Plume Height measured in meters by the MISR instrument on 12/16/19 for the Australian Fires.We can tell the height of a cloud or smoke plume above Earth’s surface by viewing it from space at different angles.  A plume located high above the surface will appear to move considerably relative to the underlying surface when view at different angles, whereas a plume closer to the surface will appear to shift less.  The MISR instrument aboard the NASA Terra satellite contains nine cameras that capture the Earth at a wide range of angles, allowing us to observe the apparent shift (called parallax) of smoke plumes from the wildfires in Australia, and to use this to determine the height.  Plume height gives an indication of fire intensity, and is also important as an input to air quality models that predict where the smoke will go, and who it might affect downwind.  In this visualization, MISR-retrieved plume heights are represented as circles with progressively lighter colors for higher elevation. Hot spots on the surface, derived from infrared brightness anomalies (at about 4 microns) in the MODIS data, are shown as red 3D circles.  Satellite/Sensor:MISR/TerraResolution:~1kmCredits:Active Aerosol Plume (AAP) Project, V. Flower, R. Kahn, K. Junghenn-Noyes, visualized by Jeremy Kirkendall, NASA Disasters Program.

Data and Resources

Field Value
dcat_issued 2020-01-16T19:03:10.000Z
dcat_modified 2020-04-03T20:05:09.334Z
dcat_publisher_name NASA ArcGIS Online
guid https://www.arcgis.com/home/item.html?id=9f7ccef738ea4b64840387cf84214f5c&sublayer=1
Tags
  • Australia
  • Fire
  • MISR
  • NASA
  • NASA Disasters Program
  • Plume
  • Smoke
isopen False
metadata_created 2025-09-18T18:26:01.371421
metadata_modified 2025-09-18T18:26:01.371428
notes <font size='4'><span style='font-weight:bold;'>Date Captured:<br /></span>12/16/19<br /><br /><span style='font-weight:bold;'>Summary:<br /></span></font><div><font size='4'>Exaggerated (20x) Plume Height measured in meters by the <a href='https://misr.jpl.nasa.gov/' target='_blank' rel='nofollow ugc noopener noreferrer'>MISR</a> instrument on 12/16/19 for the Australian Fires.</font></div><div><font size='4'><br /></font></div><div><font size='4'><div>We can tell the height of a cloud or smoke plume above Earth’s surface by viewing it from space at different angles.  A plume located high above the surface will appear to move considerably relative to the underlying surface when view at different angles, whereas a plume closer to the surface will appear to shift less.  The MISR instrument aboard the NASA Terra satellite contains nine cameras that capture the Earth at a wide range of angles, allowing us to observe the apparent shift (called parallax) of smoke plumes from the wildfires in Australia, and to use this to determine the height.  Plume height gives an indication of fire intensity, and is also important as an input to air quality models that predict where the smoke will go, and who it might affect downwind.  In this visualization, MISR-retrieved plume heights are represented as circles with progressively lighter colors for higher elevation. Hot spots on the surface, derived from infrared brightness anomalies (at about 4 microns) in the MODIS data, are shown as red 3D circles. </div><div> </div><div><span style='font-weight:bold;'>Satellite/Sensor:</span><br /></div></font></div><div><font size='4'>MISR/Terra</font></div><div><span style='font-weight:bold;'><font size='4'><br /></font></span></div><div><font size='4'><span style='font-weight:bold;'>Resolution:</span><br /></font></div><div><font size='4'>~1km</font><span style='font-weight:bold;'><font size='4'><br /></font></span></div><div><span style='font-weight:bold;'><font size='4'><br /></font></span></div><div><font size='4'><span style='font-weight:bold;'>Credits:</span></font></div><div><font size='4'>Active Aerosol Plume (AAP) Project, V. Flower, R. Kahn, K. Junghenn-Noyes, visualized by Jeremy Kirkendall, NASA Disasters Program.</font></div>
num_resources 6
num_tags 7
title all plumes exaggerated 20x 20191216
url https://disasters.amerigeoss.org/datasets/NASA::all-plumes-exaggerated-20x-20191216