Thursday, January 02, 2020

AUSTRALIAN INFERNO: Stunning images from space reveal the shocking extent of Australia's bushfire crisis

The Himawari-8 satellite's view of the Australian bushfires 

and smoke clouds on January 2. RAMMB/CIRA/CSU
Australian bushfires sparked in September have spread for months, leading to a state of emergency in many regions.
As of the new year, the blazes have scorched more than 14 million acres of land, killed about half a billion animals, and displaced hundreds of thousands of people.
The blazes are so large and widespread that satellites in space can easily photograph them from orbit.
Specialized sensors on satellites that can see through the thick smoke are recording the bushfires' spread.

Australia's raging bushfires are so bad that satellites thousands of miles above Earth can easily spot their flames and smoke from space.

The fires likely started naturally, though experts think human-caused climate disruption has exacerbated hot arid conditions that fuel the growth of such blazes. Current estimates suggest eastern Australia's bushfire crisis has scorched more than 14 million acres of land, killed about half a billion animals, and displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

The photo above — which shows plumes of smoke about half the area of Europe darkening skies as far as New Zealand in a yellow haze — was taken on Thursday by the Japan Meteorological Agency's Himawari-8 satellite.

Himawari-8 launched in October 2014 and weighs about as much as a Ford F-150 pickup truck. It now orbits over the same point about 22,300 miles above our planet. Using a variety of onboard sensors, Himawari-8, NASA's Suomi NPP satellite, and other Earth-monitoring machines are returning stunning imagery of Australia's dire situation.

Here are some of the most revealing photos, animations, and illustrations of the crisis on Earth as seen from outer space.

Himawari-8 overlooks the Western Hemisphere and photographs this face of Earth once every 10 minutes. Australia, its bushfires, and smoke plumes are easily visible.

An animation by the Himawari-8 satellite on January 2. 
NICT Science Cloud/CEReS/Kpchi University/Nagoya Science Museum
NASA's Suomi NPP satellite, which orbits about 500 

miles up, offers a much closer view of the planet — though
 a less consistent one. Here, Australia's bushfires are 
shown picking up in November.
 

An animation shows the Himawari-8 satellite's view of the
 eastern Australian bushfires from November 6 to 11. 
RAMMB/CIRA/CSU
Redder and longer wavelengths of light, such as near

 infrared, can show fiery hotspots on the ground through
 the haze and smoke.

Himawari-8's view of eastern Australian bushfires on November 7. RAMMB/CIRA/CSU
Embers from fires that began in September have spread easily in abnormally long, dry, and expansive drought.

Himawari-8's view of the Australian bushfires and smoke 
clouds on January 2. Melbourne is visible in the bottom-left 
corner. RAMMB/CIRA/CSU
This animation, from January 1 and 2, highlights multiple

 hotspots in normally invisible infrared light. Two especially 
large patches of bushfires (shown just southwest of the
 center) stretch dozens of miles long.

Himawari-8's view of the eastern Australian bushfires
 from January 1 to 2. RAMMB/CIRA/CSU
Daytime satellite views of the ground are equally, if not

 more, dramatic. The European Space Agency's 
Sentinel-2 satellite took this image of growing bushfires 
while passing over Bateman Bay on New Year's Eve.

A view of a bushfire in Bateman Bay, Australia, on
 December 31.
Copernicus EMS; Sentinel 2/ESA
Source: Twitter
The scope of the fires is hard to comprehend. In New 

South Wales alone, blazes have created a fire front in the
 state that — if put into a straight line — would stretch 
from Sydney, across the Indian Ocean, and into Afghanistan.

A satellite's view of the eastern Australian bushfires on
 January 2. NASA Worldview
Source: Twitter
The smoke plume alone is about 1.3 billion acres, or half

 the size of Europe, and is drifting more than 1,000 miles
 over New Zealand, where it is choking and yellowing the
 skies.

Himawari-8's view of the fires on January 2.
RAMMB/CIRA/CSU
Source: Twitter
So far, the bushfires have chewed through more than

 twice the area that burned in Amazon's rainforests
 during 2019.
 

An animation shows Himawari-8's view of the Australian 
bushfires and smoke clouds on January 2. RAMMB/CIRA/CSU
Source: Queimadas


At least 17 people have gone missing in the fires, eight have died, and hundreds of thousands have evacuated. Volunteer firefighters are working around the clock to curtail the disaster, though it may burn until cooler fall temperatures arrive in the Southern Hemisphere several months from now.




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