.
NASA scientists have discovered a new way to use satellites to measure
what's occurring inside Earth's land plants at a cellular level.
During
photosynthesis, plants emit what is called fluorescence -- a form of
light invisible to the naked eye but detectable by satellites orbiting
hundreds of miles above Earth. NASA scientists established a method to
turn this satellite data into global maps of the subtle phenomenon in
more detail than ever before.
The new maps -- produced by Joanna
Joiner of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and
colleagues -- provide a 16-fold increase in spatial resolution and a
3-fold increase in temporal resolution over the first proof-of-concept
maps released in 2011. Improved global measurements could have
implications for farmers interested in early indications of crop stress,
and ecologists looking to better understand global vegetation and
carbon cycle processes.
"For the first time, we are able to
globally map changes in fluorescence over the course of a single month,"
Joiner said. "This lets us use fluorescence to observe, for example,
variation in the length of the growing season."
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