File proveniente da Wikimedia Commons. Clicca per visitare la pagina originale

File:Great Lakes, No Clouds (4968915002) Brighter.jpg

Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera.
Vai alla navigazione Vai alla ricerca

File originale(5 200 × 4 000 pixel, dimensione del file: 16,54 MB, tipo MIME: image/jpeg)

Logo di Commons
Logo di Commons
Questo file e la sua pagina di descrizione (discussione · modifica) si trovano su Wikimedia Commons (?)

Dettagli

Descrizione
English: In Late August 2010 the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer aboard NASA's Aqua satellite provided a rare satellite view of a cloudless summer day over the entire Great Lakes region. North Americans trying to sneak in a Labor Day weekend getaway on the lakes were hoping for more of the same.The Great Lakes comprise the largest collective body of fresh water on the planet, containing roughly 18 percent of Earth's supply. Only the polar ice caps contain more fresh water. The region around the Great Lakes basin is home to more than 10 percent of the population of the United States and 25 percent of the population of Canada.Many of those people have tried to escape record heat this summer by visiting the lakes. What they found, according to The Hamilton Spectator, was record-breaking water temperatures fueled by record-breaking air temperatures in the spring and summer. By mid-August, the waters of Lake Superior were 6 to 8°C (11 to 14°F) above normal. Lake Michigan set records at about 4°C (7°F) above normal. The other three Great Lakes – Huron, Erie, and Ontario -- were above normal temperatures, though no records were set.The image was gathered by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite at 1:30 p.m. Central Daylight Time (18:30 UTC) on August 28. Open water appears blue or nearly black. The pale blue and green swirls near the coasts are likely caused by algae or phytoplankton blooms, or by calcium carbonate (chalk) from the lake floor. The sweltering summer temperatures have produced an unprecedented bloom of toxic blue-green algae in western Lake Erie, according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer..References.Environmental Protection Agency. (n.d.) The Great Lakes Atlas. Accessed September 3, 2010..The Cleveland Plain Dealer. (August 22, 2010) Scientists say the toxic blue-green algae will only get worse on Ohio lakes. Accessed September 3, 2010..The Hamilton Spectator. (August 13, 2010) Great Lakes turn to 'bath water.' Accessed September 3, 2010.NASA image by Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team, Goddard Space Flight Center. Caption by Mike Carlowicz.Instrument: Aqua - MODISClick here to see more images fromNASA Goddard’s Earth ObservatoryNASA Goddard Space Flight Centeris home to the nation's largest organization of combined scientists, engineers and technologists that build spacecraft, instruments and new technology to study the Earth, the sun, our solar system, and the universe.Follow us onTwitterJoin us onFacebook
Data
Fonte http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=45615
Autore NASA
Altre versioni
File:Great-Lakes-no-clouds-2010-08-28.jpg

Licenza

Public domain Questo file è nel pubblico dominio perché creato dalla NASA. La politica sul copyright della NASA afferma che «il materiale della NASA non è protetto da copyright a meno che non sia specificato altrimenti». (NASA copyright policy e JPL Image Use Policy).
Attenzione:

Didascalie

Aggiungi una brevissima spiegazione di ciò che questo file rappresenta
Great Lakes seen from NASA's Aqua satellite

Elementi ritratti in questo file

raffigura

Cronologia del file

Fare clic su un gruppo data/ora per vedere il file come si presentava nel momento indicato.

Data/OraMiniaturaDimensioniUtenteCommento
attuale18:12, 11 ott 2022Miniatura della versione delle 18:12, 11 ott 20225 200 × 4 000 (16,54 MB)TheWxResearcherUploaded a work by NASA from http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=45615 with UploadWizard

La seguente pagina usa questo file:

Utilizzo globale del file

Anche i seguenti wiki usano questo file:

Metadati