With our latest release, version 3.8.2, vector capabilities have been extended to the Fire and Thermal Anomalies layers! A total of 5 sets of layers from Terra/MODIS, Aqua/MODIS, Terra and Aqua combined/MODIS, Suomi NPP/VIIRS and NOAA-20/VIIRS.
This means that when you zoom into any fire point, you can click on an individual fire point and retrieve attribute information about that fire/thermal anomaly and most notably, you will be able to find out what time the fire was detected.
These attributes include:
Detailed descriptions of the attributes: VIIRS and MODIS.
Other vector layers in Worldview include Dams, Reservoirs, Nuclear Power Plants and Settlements.
You can access the layers by clicking on "Add Layers", selecting the "Featured" tab and selecting layers listed under "Fires and Thermal Anomalies (Vectors) and Socioeconomic Data (Vectors) or simply typing "vectors" in the search box!
Go to Worldview and investigate the fire points in Northern California on 15 September 2020.
You may be thinking, I really just want to take these vectors and display them in my own client, so check out the GIBS API for Developers: Vector Visualizations documentation and visit the gibs-web-examples GitHub repo to find some live examples!
The Fires and Thermal Anomalies layers are also available via web services from the Fire Information for Resource Management System (FIRMS).
Worldview Release 3.7.0 includes lots of new goodies!
For more information, read this short article on the Earthdata website: New Imagery and Functionality Available in NASA Worldview.
Interacting with the Settlements vector layer brings up more detailed information.
We've added quite a few new imagery layers into GIBS and the latest version (3.7.0) of Worldview - a total of 35 new layers!
This means that we now have 4 sets of similar imagery from 4 different satellite/sensor combinations! This is useful for cross comparison and for continuity for when older missions retire.
The unified algorithm layers will replace the existing AMSR2 layers as the older imagery is processed.
Sea Surface Temperature (MUR25) at the top and Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies (MUR25) at the bottom from GHRSST.
Please complete NASA's Land Atmosphere Near real-time Capability for EOS (LANCE) Customer Satisfaction Survey if you would like to provide feedback on NASA's near real-time data and imagery distributed through LANCE, Worldview Worldview Snapshots, the Global Imagery Browse Services (GIBS) and/or Fire Information for Resource Management System (FIRMS).
We released a new version of NASA Worldview, version 3.5.0, yesterday and wanted to share the good news with you!
Read the short article on the Earthdata website, Layer by Layer, NASA Worldview Continues to Improve, to learn more about our most recent improvements or just go and visit NASA Worldview to see the new changes!
New features include a preview image and layer description when a layer search is conducted.
In this release, we have also added a new set of Fires and Thermal Anomalies layers (Day and Night) from the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on board the NOAA-20 (aka JPSS-1) satellite. This satellite crosses the equator 50 minutes prior to the Suomi National Polar orbiting Partnership (Suomi NPP) satellite, at approximately 12:40 PM (ascending/day node) and 12:40 AM (descending/night node). This means we now have four sets of Fires and Thermal Anomalies (Day and Night) layers - MODIS/Terra, MODIS/Aqua, VIIRS/Suomi NPP, and VIIRS/NOAA-20! Explore the Fires and Thermal Anomalies layer from VIIRS/NOAA-20 in NASA Worldview!
VIIRS/NOAA-20 Fires and Thermal Anomalies layers now available in Worldview.
We've been faithfully providing daily global imagery from MODIS, VIIRS, and other instruments for the last 7+ years and we're now entering new territory - we're going to provide a rolling month of geostationary imagery from GOES-East, GOES-West and Himawari-8.
That's imagery available at 10 MINUTE increments for the last month!
Our current offerings will be Red Visible, Clean Infrared and Air Mass. We may add more in the future, or provide higher resolution versions of this imagery - keep an eye on the blog for any updates! In particular, the Red Visible layer is currently being displayed at 1km spatial resolution but may be available at its native 500m in the future.
Open Worldview's latest release (v.3.2.0): https://worldview.earthdata.nasa.gov
TIP: The geostationary imagery from GOES-East, GOES-West and Himawari-8 is available in 10 minute increments starting at 00:00.
TIP: The Red Visible layer is only available during the daytime; the Clean Infrared and Air Mass layers are available all day!
Check out our latest Worldview tour story that shows off the geostationary imagery - Hurricane Dorian (September 2019)
Read more about Geostationary imagery on the Earthdata website - Now Available in Worldview: Earth Every 10 Minutes
and MOST IMPORTANTLY, get started with geostationary imagery in Worldview!
As always, if you have any comments or feedback, contact us at support@earthdata.nasa.gov
PS: geostationary imagery isn't just for hurricanes and clouds! Here's an example showing a recent fire in northern California combining red band imagery from GOES-West with fires and thermal anomalies from Suomi NPP / VIIRS over the morning of 2019-10-27:
Worldview's camera tool (upper right) in action
The resulting image after clicking "Download" in the camera tool
Summary: we've swapped out the backend service to Worldview's camera tool; you shouldn't notice a thing unless you're scraping directly from the (undocumented / deprecated) backend service.
If you've used Worldview's camera tool in the upper right corner of the app, you may have noticed that it can open a new window with a URL like this:
That URL requested a custom image with your specified bounding box, layers, file format, output resolution, etc... using the legacy "Image Download" service. With the advent of the new Worldview Snapshots tool and backend, we've consolidated how those custom images are generated. In fact, we've already transitioned the Worldview camera tool to use the Worldview Snapshots backend. So the same request above now looks like this:
As mentioned in the Summary, this shouldn't have an impact on regular Worldview usage. This post is geared toward those who are still directly using the undocumented, and now deprecated, "Image Download" service - we know you're out there! You'll need to transition your current requests by either
We plan to decommission the "Image Download" service in April Summer 2019 which will then return a static image with an error message and pointer to this page.
Please contact us at support@earthdata.nasa.gov if you have any questions or concerns.
First released in 1999, the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Web Map Service (WMS) has been a stalwart of standards used to flexibly serve map-based imagery through an HTTP interface for two decades. While GIBS has long used the newer OGC Web Map Tile Service (WMTS) to rapidly distribute its earth science data visualizations, we've found that there are still a number of use cases which are better served by the WMS interface. These include:
Our new service is available in the "Geographic" (EPSG:4326), Web Mercator (EPSG:3857), Arctic polar stereographic (EPSG:3413), and Antarctic polar stereographic (EPSG:3031) projections. And, of course, it supports time-based access to GIBS' historical archive of visualizations.
Check out our updated API documentation for WMS and GIS documentation to see how you might use the new GIBS WMS!
We've been burning the midnight oil to bring you some new features and lots of new imagery in GIBS and Worldview.
Our latest feature in Worldview is our tour!
This tour is now more story focused, bringing you 9 different stories about events going on around the world, interesting tidbits about the imagery, imagery tutorials and information on how to use Worldview.
We'll update the tour stories regularly to keep it fresh!
Go to Worldview, https://worldview.earthdata.nasa.gov to check it out!
Tip: If you get tired of seeing the tour window every time you open Worldview, check the box "Do not show until a new story has been added".
We've fallen way behind on letting you know about the new imagery in GIBS and Worldview. We've come to a whopping 800+ imagery layers, adding almost 200 layers since our last imagery related blog post in September 2017, and the number keeps on growing! Go to the following page to see the full list of available imagery products.
ISS/LIS Lightning Flash Count and Radiance over Africa
Lightning (6 layers): TRMM LIS Flash Radiance (Level 2, Standard); Calibrated Flash Radiance (OTD / Microlab-1); DMSP-F12 OLS Digital Derived Lightning (Level 3, Standard, OLS / DMSP-F12); DMSP-F10 OLS Digital Derived Lightning (Level 3, Standard, OLS / DMSP-F10), ISS/LIS Flash Radiance and Flash Count.
Sulfur Dioxide (4 layers): Sulfur Dioxide: Planetary Boundary layer; Lower Troposphere; Middle Troposphere; Upper Troposphere and Stratosphere.
Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) Daily Level 3 imagery (14 layers): Outgoing Longwave Radiation (Day | Night, Daily); Clear Sky Outgoing Longwave Radiation (Day | Night, Daily), Carbon Monoxide (500hPa, Day | Night, Daily); Methane (400hPa, Day | Night, Daily); Surface Air Temperature (Day | Night, Daily); Surface Relative Humidity (Day | Night, Daily); Surface Skin Temperature (Day | Night, Daily)
Soil Moisture (5 layers): GCOM-W1 AMSR2 LPRM Surface Soil Moisture C1-band (Day | Night, Daily); GCOM-W1 AMSR2 LPRM Surface Soil Moisture C1-band (Downscaled, Day | Night, Daily); SMAP/Sentinel-1 Soil Moisture
Sea Surface Currents/Height Anomalies/Temperature (8 layers): Sea Surface Currents (Zonal, OSCAR); Sea Surface Currents (Meridional, OSCAR); Sea Surface Height Anomalies (GDR Cycles, TOPEX/Poseidon, JASON); Sea Surface Height Anomalies (US West Coast, GAFECC, TOPEX/Poseidon, JASON); Sea Surface Currents (Zonal, US West Coast, GAFECC, TOPEX/Poseidon, JASON); Sea Surface Currents (Meridional, US West Coast, GAFECC, TOPEX/Poseidon, JASON); Sea Surface Height Anomalies (Reconstructed, TOPEX/Poseidon, JASON); Sea Surface Temperature (L4, AVHRR-OI)
Sea Ice (2 layers): AMSRU2 Sea Ice Concentration; AMSRU2 Sea Ice Brightness Temperature
OMPS Aerosol Index (PyroCumuloNimbus) over North America during the Summer 2018 wildfire season
Aerosols (5 layers): OMI UV Aerosol Index; OMPS Aerosol Index; OMPS Aerosol Index (PyroCumuloNimbus); SeaWiFS DeepBlue Aerosol Optical Thickness 550nm (Daily); SeaWiFS DeepBlue Aerosol Angstrom Exponent (Daily)
Wind Speed (1 layer): CYGNSS Wind Speed Daily
Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit-A (AMSU-A) imagery (45 layers): Brightness Temperature Channels 1 - 15 from NOAA-15 (3 August 1998 - present), NOAA-16 (27 May 2001 - 3 March 2008) and NOAA-17 (21 July 2002 - 28 October 2003).
Absolute Dynamic Topography (1 layer): Absolute Dynamic Topography (AVISO)
Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (11 layers): Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Mascon, CRI, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Mascon, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Land, GFZ, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Land, JPL, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Land, CSR, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Ocean, GFZ, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Ocean, JPL, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Ocean, CSR, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Ocean, EOF, GFZ, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Ocean, EOF, JPL, GRACE Tellus); Liquid Water Equivalent Thickness (Ocean, EOF, CSR, GRACE Tellus)
Sea Surface Salinity 8-Day (2 layers): Sea Surface Salinity (L3, 8-Day Running Mean, Radiometer); Sea Surface Salinity (L3, CAP, 8-Day Running Mean, Radiometer)
Aerosols (2 layers): SeaWiFS DeepBlue Aerosol Optical Thickness 550nm (Monthly); SeaWiFS DeepBlue Aerosol Angstrom Exponent (Monthly).
Sea Surface Salinity (2 layers): Sea Surface Salinity (L3, Monthly, Radiometer); Sea Surface Salinity (L3, CAP, Monthly, Radiometer,).
Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) Sea Surface Salinity (L3, CAP, Monthly)
Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2 (MERRA-2) imagery (26 layers):
Socioeconomic imagery (47 layers)
Land Cover (1 layer): WELD 5 Year Tree Cover
Orbit Tracks (Ascending | Descending) (18 layers): Sentinel 1A, Sentinel 1B , Sentinel 2A, Sentinel 2B, Sentinel 5P, ICESat-2, MetOP-C, GCOM-C and Landsat 7.
The Global Imagery Browse Services (GIBS) and Worldview Teams have developed a new tool called Worldview Snapshots. Worldview Snapshots is a lightweight tool for creating image snapshots from a selection of popular NASA satellite imagery layers provided through GIBS.
You can preview and download imagery in different band combinations and add overlays on the imagery of active fire/thermal anomalies detections, coastlines, borders and roads. Once you've selected your desired area of interest and parameters - map projection, date, layers, bounding box, and image file options - click on the "Preview" button. Saving the URL in the "Share Image" box in the Preview pane and clicking the checkbox next to either "Always show today" or "Always show yesterday" will ensure that every time you visit that URL you will always get today's image or yesterday's image depending on which option you picked. Click on "Download Image" to get your desired image.
If you're familiar with Rapid Response, you may know that it is being decommissioned and Worldview Snapshots is its replacement. If you like to maintain your Rapid Response Subset bounding boxes, the links on this page will direct you to the same Rapid Response bounding box area in Worldview Snapshots.
Learn more about Worldview Snapshots in this article: Introducing Worldview Snapshots and start using Worldview Snapshots - https://wvs.earthdata.nasa.gov
We’ve been working so hard this past year that we forgot to keep our blog up to date! Never fear, we are here now to bring you up to speed on all of the new and shiny features and layers we provide in Worldview.
The most recent and most exciting update: We’ve added a comparison feature! Compare the same imagery from two different dates, compare different imagery for the same date or whatever combination of the above that you like! The comparison feature provides 3 different tools to investigate the imagery – swipe, opacity, and spy. The comparison feature aids in investigating changes between two time periods or quickly comparing different types of imagery on the same date.
Click on “Start Comparison”
The layer list on the left will now show two tabbed layer lists labeled “A” and “B”. Tab A shows the current day, and tab B shows the previous day. The timeline also has “A” and “B” selectors to show which date you are on.
The map now shows the Swipe mode: A vertical line has appeared on the map with the left side labeled “A” and the right side labeled “B”. Click and hold your mouse on the line and move the line left and right to see the changes from one date to another.
You can also change the Compare Mode to Opacity and Spy. Opacity fades from one day’s image to another; spy positions a circular looking glass on the map showing the B state within the circle.
Click on “Exit Comparison” to get out of Comparison mode. You’ll be left on the last tab you had active - maintaining the layers and the date you were last on.
This animated GIF demonstrates Worldview's Comparison feature, using the Opacity mode. It demonstrates changes in the Aral Sea in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, between 31 July 2000 (A) and 24 August 2017 (B).
This screenshot demonstrates Worldview's Comparison feature, using the Swipe mode. Snowfall (shown in red using the Corrected Reflectance, Bands 3-6-7 combination) in Lesotho in southern Africa is shown on the left hand side (A) on 11 August 2018, and no snow a few days before on the right hand side (B) on 8 August 2018.
-- Stay tuned for an update on our other new features and abundant new imagery layers!
Worldview and the Global Imagery Browse Services (GIBS) are now offering near real-time true/natural color (RGB) and infrared color (NGB) imagery from the Multi-angle Imaging Spectro-Radiometer (MISR) instrument on the Terra satellite. The imagery are available for the nadir, four fore and four aft views provided by MISR's nine cameras.
That's looking at the earth from 9 different angles in two different band combinations - a total of 18 imagery products!
The true/natural color imagery use the Red-Green-Blue (RGB) band wavelength combination to produce images that is similar to what the human eye would see, providing natural-looking images of land surface, oceanic and atmospheric features. The infrared color imagery uses the Near Infrared-Green-Blue (NGB) band wavelength combination to produce images that make it easier to differentiate between types of vegetation and shows vegetation in red, it's also good for identifying surface water.
The spatial resolution of the natural color imagery is 250m. Imagery for the infrared color radiance is at 1 km for the eight off-nadir views and 250m for the nadir view.
The imagery is produced from the MISR Level 1 ellipsoid-projected radiance data products by NASA’s Land, Atmosphere Near real-time Capability for EOS (LANCE) MISR Element at NASA’s Atmospheric Science Data Center (ASDC). These products are generally accessible within two to three hours of a satellite overpass, and are available for viewing through NASA’s Worldview or similar GIBS client systems. Imagery for these products is available from 1 September 2017 to present.
While LANCE near real-time products are not intended to take the place of data products generated by the detailed processing necessary for scientific research, they are an invaluable resource for users needing rapid, continually updated views of ongoing Earth processes.
MISR A Nadir, Infrared color (Color Radiance (An, NGB)) image of the Nile River Delta on the 23rd September 2017.
Download the corresponding data in Worldview!
Hurricane Irma on the 7th of September 2017. This animation shows the storm from different angles as imaged by MISR's 9 cameras, in the following order: Df, Cf, Bf, Af, An, Aa, Ba, Ca, Da - viewing forward, downward, and backward along the Terra satellite flight path (overlaid on MODIS/Terra imagery).
The following layers have now been forward processed to the present day/end of most recent month (and will continue to be forward processed):
The following layers have been forward processed to May 2017 (and will continue to be forward processed):
The following layers have been forward processed to April 2017 (and will continue to be forward processed):
We've made some improvements and now you can find the layer descriptions anytime you bring up a layer. In the past, the descriptions were fairly difficult to find.
Whether you're scrolling through the categories, doing a search in the Layer Picker or even once you've loaded the layer into the Layer List, the descriptions are there!
When you've found an awesome image in Worldview, you can now share the URL with your friends in Facebook, Twitter (#NASAWorldview), Reddit and via email. Just click on the share icon in the top right corner of Worldview.
Worldview's incorporated a notification system so that you will be notified within Worldview if imagery delivery has been delayed or system maintenance is in progress. You might even find out if a new and exciting feature has been added to Worldview!
We're always working on improving Worldview and cooking up the next new feature(s)! Currently, were working on improving our search function and improving the browse and interaction with the Events feed. Check out our new Roadmap to see what our near-, mid- and long-term goals are and what we're prioritizing to work on next!
GIBS and Worldview continues to expand their offerings of imagery - we have incorporated a whole bunch of new imagery for you to use and interact with!
Worldview has incorporated some exciting new features to help you explore the planet! In addition to the features mentioned below, we have also included an auto-disable function which prevents a layer from being turned on if there is no imagery available for that date.
Imagery layers like the MODIS or VIIRS Corrected Reflectance and some other daytime layers can now be viewed over the dateline/antimeridian for the day prior to and after the current date displayed. This allows for an unbroken view of the Pacific Ocean as observed by the satellites.
Users can now view the data value under the cursor in the respective layer's legend/color bar for relevant discrete/continuous data visualization layers.
Close up of the legend showing the corresponding image data value.
A marker or bounding box has been added to illustrate an event’s location shown in the Events feed.
Icons have been added to differentiate between natural event categories in the Events feed.
Natural events icons – Many thanks to our newest contributor, CodeMacabre, for developing these beautiful icons!
Update 2017/03/23 20:10 UTC: this issue has been resolved between GIBS and the data provider, VIIRS imagery should now be up to date and being processed. Please report any problems to support@earthdata.nasa.gov and thanks for your patience!
VIIRS near real-time products and some MODIS near real-time atmosphere products have been unavailable in GIBS since March 20, 2017 due to operating system upgrades on the imagery provider's web site.
We are working with the provider to resolve the issues. Sorry for the inconvenience.