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NWTCG NOAA AVHRR Information Site Frequently Asked Questions
Questions
Can I use this data with other
programs such as OziExplorer?
What are the best files to look at?
Why are the images black?
How do I use it?
How often is it updated?
What do all the colours on the images
mean?
What do fires look like?
What did other dates in year 2000 look
like?
What other images are available?
Why is the image so muddy/unclear?
Why does it not fit on my screen?
Why does it say file not found?
How does all this work?
What is UTC Time?
What "day" is it?
What else can it do?
What are the image projection
parameters
Related links
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Can I use this data with other
programs such as OziExplorer?
Yes you can. Many GIS programs will use Geotif data.
The projection information that you will need can be found at the bottom of
this page. A warning the tif files are large, most are between 1 and 8
megabytes.
I have created OziExplorer "map" files for
the TIF files on this site. To use these files with OziExplorer download OziExplorerAVHRR.zip
maps and save the contents to the "OziExplorer\maps" folder.
OziExplorer needs the ".map" file to describe the TIF files. To
view a particular image right click on the desired TIFF and select
"Save target as" save the file to the same
"OziExplorer\maps" folder that you placed the ".map"
files. You can then do "Map / Open" in OziExplorer to load the
file that you saved.
Please remember that the AVHRR files are not precision
geometrically corrected and there may be positional errors typically up to
10 Km. Rarely images will be totally incorrect.
Return to questions
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What are the best files to look
at?
In the fall and winter the best images are the thermal
images. The visual images are usually not useful because the sun is too low
(or not present) in the sky. In the summer time both image sets have useful
information. The thermal images show fires very well and the visual images
show vegetation ore greenness.
Return to questions
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Why are the images black?
The reason that part of the image is black - Each
"picture" is a composite of all the images for that day. The
composite is cleared at the start of each day so parts of the image that
have no data yet for that day are black. The "visual image set"
requires sunlight and does not produce an image if the sun is too low in the
sky. During the spring, fall and winter the sun angle is too low and it is
possible that no valid "visual" data may be present in a pass.
There is also a "Thermal" image set that uses
the AVHRR thermal channels. These images do not require sunlight and may
contain useful information. During the winter the thermal only AVHRR band
combination of 4,4,5 is used. During the spring it's 1,2,3. During the fire
season it's 3,2,1. Channels 1 and 2 are "visual bands".
Return to questions
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What do all the colours on the
images mean?
Have a look at our sample
images with descriptions
There are several band combinations that are used at
different times of the year.
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The "Visual" set uses AVHRR bands 1,2,4.
The visual set shows the cloud, snow, water, land and ice best. The sun
must be at least 5 degrees above the horizon when the image is captured
for valid data to be captured. This set is used all year.
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During the winter the "thermal" set uses
4,4,5 which do not require sunlight. Since these do not require sunlight
valid data is available even when the sun is low or not present What you
are seeing is close to the "surface temperature" of what ever
is under the sensor. Warmer items are darker. You will notice that the
land is colder than the water. The higher cloud is usually colder than
lower cloud and snow.
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During the late spring the "thermal" set
uses AVHRR bands 1,2,3.
This combination is very similar to the "Visual" set.
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During the late spring the "thermal" set
uses 3,2,1.
In this set the recent burns usually show as dull red especially late in
the day. Active fire shows as bright red often with smoke evident.
Return to questions
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What do fires look like?
Here
are some samples from 1999 fire season. Select this link then pick a
date from the "Fire image set list" in the top left frame.
Look in the "thermal" images for red spots on
some of the images. If you look at a number of dates you can see fires
appear, get larger and go out. Sometimes fires are obscured by cloud and do
not appear. Sometimes it is difficult to distinguish recent burns from
current burns. Look for smoke plumes on current burns.
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Why is the image so muddy/unclear?
The images are large in many respects. They have many
colours, lots of lines and pixels and are many kilobytes or megabytes in
size. They look much better on the computer screen than on a printer. They
also look better if your computer system can display more than 256 colours.
To see what your computer is configured to display do the following: (these
instructions are for Windows 95/Windows NT computers)
Click on start/settings/control panel,
then "display" and select the "settings" tab
look at the "colour palette" value and the "desktop
area". Higher numbers are better. You can try changing them, but don't
call me if it causes you other problems.
The TIFs have better detail than the JPGs but are much
larger. The JPGs range in size from 300-800 Kilobytes the TIFs can be
several Megabytes. You will also need to have a program that can view them.
PCI has a "Freeware" viewer that you could use called handler
(about 10 Megabytes in size). The tiffs can also be imported into other
graphics programs as well as Spans GIS and Arc/View
The HTML pages were tested with Internet Explorer
5.0/5.5 and probably don't work very well on Internet Explorer 3.x or early
versions of Internet Explorer 4.x. They seem pretty good on Netscape
Navigator 4.6
Return to questions
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How does all this work?
The National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
has a series of polar orbiting satellites. The data on this site is derived
from these satellites.
All the work done on these images is done automatically
and has not been verified in any way. Some things you may note is that these
images do not always line up correctly and sometimes very little is
recognisable. This is due to automatic nature of the processing. I can only
put a limited amount of "smarts" into the process.
Currently my procedure is in place to receive 6-10
images per day of NOAA 17 and 18. (There are also images from NOAA 12 in the archives.) The images are:
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Received by the Satlantic AVHRR receiving station
located on the Scotia Centre, Yellowknife, NT
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Imported to PCI Geomatics image analysis system.
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Calibrated using methods from NOAASIS and the
Canada Centre for Geomatics. The thermal channels are converted to
radiance and the visible channels are converted to percent reflectance.
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Clipped to a 55 degree satellite viewing angle and
85 degree solar zenith angle.
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Geo-corrected to various scales and geographic
areas, composited with the previous images of that day.
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Various versions of bands 1,2,3,4 and 5 are
exported as JPG and geo-TIF for viewing.
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At midnight (MST time) I clear all the channels so
you only see data from the current day in any image. During the winter
this may mean that some visual channel sets are all black.
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The time of the next pass is the time the satellite
rises above the horizon. The satellite pass takes 10-15 minutes. At the
end of that time the file is copied to the PCI system. Processing by the
PCI procedures usually starts with in 5 minutes of the completion of the
satellite pass. The PCI system processing time varies from 10 to 30
minutes and is determined by other processing loads on the system.
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The unprocessed data is archived to tape. The
oldest processed files that you see on the web are deleted when a new
image is processed. I keep the 20 most recent images on disk. I can
retrieve from tape and reprocess files as needed for specific projects.
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All of this happens automatically. I check the
system occasionally and receive alerts if there is a system failure.
Although it is quite reliable it does stop occasionally. If this happens
on a weekend it won't be fixed until I'm back to work on Monday. All the
images collected on the weekend will be processed before new images are
processed so this will also delay the Monday images. Depending on the
cause of the disruption some images may be lost.
Return to questions
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Related links
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For more information or to make any comments
contact
gnwtmaps_admin at gnwtmaps_admin@gov.nt.ca
NWT Centre for Geomatics
5102-50th Ave
Yellowknife NT X1A 3S8
CANADA
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