Eastern equatorial Pacific phytoplankton bloom image
Posted: Thu Apr 25, 2019 9:26 am America/New_York
Hi Daniele,
I assume you are referring to this image.
https://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/feature/AnomalousEquatorialPacificBloom/A2007311222500.TropicalSouthPacificBloom.png
I made it while being paid by U.S. tax payers using a tax-payer-funded data set,
so the image is in the public ___domain and free to be used as you see fit.
Yes, the bright streak running diagonally across the left half of the image is
caused by the specular reflection of sunlight from the sea surface. The striping
that you see within that band is caused by the imperfect intercalibration of the
detectors in the MODIS focal plane. Such sensor artifacts tend to become more
visible in regions of sun glint.
My name is Norman Kuring. Pleased to meet you. :-)
Even though it's been over ten years since I made this particular image, I did manage
to find a version without an embedded graticule. I put a copy here.
https://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/fileshare/norman_kuring/A2007311222400.rgb.jpg
Best wishes on your thesis.
Norman
I assume you are referring to this image.
https://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/feature/AnomalousEquatorialPacificBloom/A2007311222500.TropicalSouthPacificBloom.png
I made it while being paid by U.S. tax payers using a tax-payer-funded data set,
so the image is in the public ___domain and free to be used as you see fit.
Yes, the bright streak running diagonally across the left half of the image is
caused by the specular reflection of sunlight from the sea surface. The striping
that you see within that band is caused by the imperfect intercalibration of the
detectors in the MODIS focal plane. Such sensor artifacts tend to become more
visible in regions of sun glint.
My name is Norman Kuring. Pleased to meet you. :-)
Even though it's been over ten years since I made this particular image, I did manage
to find a version without an embedded graticule. I put a copy here.
https://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/fileshare/norman_kuring/A2007311222400.rgb.jpg
Best wishes on your thesis.
Norman