South-Central Section - 46th Annual Meeting (8–9 March 2012)

Paper No. 6
Presentation Time: 2:45 PM

HUMAN SETTLEMENTS IN THE SOUTH-CENTRAL U.S., VIEWED AT NIGHT FROM THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION


DAWSON, Melissa D.1, EVANS, Cynthia A.2, STEFANOV, William L.3, WILKINSON, M. Justin4, WILLIS, Kim4 and RUNCO, Susan5, (1)Jacobs Engineering and Science Contract, NASA Johnson Space Center, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, TX 77058, (2)NASA Johnson Space Center, Mail Code KT, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, TX 77058, (3)Image Science & Analysis Laboratory/ESCG, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX 77058, (4)Jacobs Engineering, NASA/Johnson Space Center, P.O. Box 58447, Houston, TX 77058, (5)NASA Johnson Space Center, Mail Code KX, 2101 NASA Parkway, Houston, TX 77058, melissa.dawson@nasa.gov

A recent innovation of astronauts observing Earth from the International Space Station (ISS) is documenting human footprints by photographing city lights at night time. One of the earliest night-time images from the ISS was the US–Mexico border at El Paso–Ciudad Juarez. The colors, patterns and density of city lights document the differences in the cultural settlement patterns across the border region, as well as within the urban areas themselves. City lights help outline the most populated areas in settlements around the world, and can be used to explore relative population densities, changing patterns of urban/suburban development, transportation networks, spatial relationship to geographic features, and more.

These data also provide insight into parameters such as surface roughness for input into local and regional climate modeling and studies of light pollution. The ground resolution of night-time astronaut photography from the ISS is typically an order of magnitude greater than current Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) data, and therefore can serve as a “zoom lens” for selected urban areas. Current handheld digital cameras in use on the ISS, optimized for greater light sensitivity, provide opportunities to obtain new detailed imagery of atmospheric phenomena such as airglow, aurora, and noctilucent clouds in addition to documenting urban patterns.

ISS astronauts have taken advantage of increasingly sensitive digital cameras to document the world at night in unprecedented detail. In addition, the capability to obtain time-lapse imagery from fixed cameras has been exploited to produce dynamic videos of both changing surface patterns around the world and atmospheric phenomena. We will profile some spectacular images of human settlements over the South-Central U.S., and contrast with other images from around the world. More data can be viewed at http://eol.jsc.nasa.gov/Videos/CrewEarthObservationsVideos/.