Date of Images:5/5/2024Date of Next Image:UnknownSummary:The Color Infrared composite is created using the near-infrared, red, and green channels, allowing for the ability to see areas impacted by the event. The near-infrared gives the ability to see through thin clouds. Healthy vegetation is shown as red, water is in blue.The Short Wave Infrared (SWIR) RGB is a product that is created using the SWIR, NIR, and Red channels of the respective instrument.The True Color RGB composite provides a product of how the surface would look to the naked eye from space. The RGB is created using the red, green, and blue channels of the respective instrument.Suggested Use:A Color Infrared composite depicts healthy vegetation as red, water as blue. Some minor atmospheric corrections have occurred.The Short Wave Infrared (SWIR) RGB is a product that can provides value in flood detection. Areas of water will appear blue, healthy green vegetation will appear as a bright green, urban areas in various shades of magenta, snow will appear as a bright blue/cyan, and bare soils being multicolor dependent on their makeup. Compare pre-event imagery to post-event imagery to identify potential flooding.The True Color RGB provides a product of how the surface would look to the naked eye from space and may show damage caused by severe weather. The True Color RGB is produced using the 3 visible wavelength bands (red, green, and blue) from the respective sensor. Some minor atmospheric corrections have occurred.Satellite/Sensor:MultiSpectral Instrument (MSI) on European Space Agency's (ESA) Copernicus Sentinel-2A/2B satellitesResolution:Color Infrared RGB: 10 metersShortwave Infrared RGB: 20 metersTrue Color RGB: 10 metersCredits:NASA/MSFC, USGS, ESA CopernicusEsri REST Endpoint:See URL section on the right side of page.WMS Endpoint:https://maps.disasters.nasa.gov/ags04/services/texas_flood_202405/sentinel2/MapServer/WMSServerData Download:https://maps.disasters.nasa.gov/download/gis_products/event_specific/2024/texas_flood_202405/sentinel2/