Saturday 29 October 2016

NASA RELEASES MAP OF INDIA ON DIWALI NIGHT

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SEE HOW INDIA LOOKS FROM SPACE ON DIWALI NIGHT

fake Image use on social media


NASA, the national space organization of the U.S., on Thursday discharged a high contrast satellite symbolism of India Diwali night 2012, advised individuals against the fake picture available for use on the online networking.

"On November 12, 2012, the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) on the Suomi NPP satellite caught this evening perspective of southern Asia," NASA said discharging a photo of India on this Diwali night.
image shared by NASA


"The picture depends on information gathered by the VIIRS 'day-night band', which distinguishes light in a scope of wavelengths from green to close infrared. The picture has been lit up to make the city lights less demanding to recognize," it said.

NASA said the vast majority of the splendid zones in the symbolism discharged by it are urban communities and towns in India. "India is home to more than 1.2 billion individuals and has 30 urban areas with populaces more than 1 million," it said.

Urban communities in Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan are likewise obvious close to the edges of the picture.

"A picture that cases to demonstrate the locale lit for Diwali has been circling via web-based networking media sites and the Internet as of late. Actually, it doesn't demonstrate what it claims.

That picture, in light of information from the Operational Linescan System flown on US Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) satellites, is a shading—composite made in 2003 by NOAA researcher Chris Elvidge to highlight populace development after some time," NASA said.
images shared by generals on social media

"In that picture, white zones demonstrate city lights that were obvious preceding 1992, while blue, green, and red shades show city lights that got to be unmistakable in 1992, 1998, and 2003 separately," it said.

"As a general rule, any additional light created amid Diwali is subtle to the point that it is likely impalpable when seen from space," NASA said.






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