NASA Partnership Sends Earth Science Data To Africa

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Oct. 06, 2010

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Alan Buis 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
818-354-0474 
alan.buis@xxxxxxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-240

NASA PARTNERSHIP SENDS EARTH SCIENCE DATA TO AFRICA

WASHINGTON -- A unique partnership between NASA and agencies in Africa 
and Europe has sent more than 30 terabytes of free Earth science 
satellite data to South African researchers to support sustainable 
development and environmental applications in Africa. 

The data from one of the instruments on NASA's Terra satellite provide 
observations of Africa's surface and atmosphere, including vegetation 
structure, airborne pollution particles, cloud heights and winds. 
Transfer of these data to a distribution center in Africa will make 
it broadly accessible to African users who have not been able to 
remotely download the large data files because of limitations in the 
continent's Internet infrastructure. 

The data are from the Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) on 
Terra. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., built 
and manages the instrument, and NASA's Langley Research Center in 
Hampton, Va., processes, archives, and distributes the data. 

MISR has been making continuous measurements of Earth's surface and 
atmosphere for more than a decade. MISR observes the sunlit portion 
of Earth continuously, viewing the entire globe between 82 degrees 
north and 82 degrees south latitude every nine days. Instead of 
viewing Earth from a single perspective, the instrument collects 
images from nine widely spaced view angles. 

"NASA is committed to helping governments, organizations and 
researchers around the world make effective use of Earth observation 
data to aid in environmental decision making," said Hal Maring, a 
program manager in the Earth Science Division of the Science Mission 
Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "These efforts 
support the goals of the Group on Earth Observations, a partnership 
of international agencies that promotes collaborative use of Earth 
science data." 

South Africa's Council for Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) 
in Pretoria will distribute the data at no charge to the research 
community in the region. CSIR will facilitate access to the large 
volume of MISR data as part of its broad strategy of educating, 
training and transferring knowledge to the southern African research 
community. 

"The data transfer can be seen as a birthday present from NASA to the 
newly-formed South African National Space Agency," said Bob Scholes, 
CSIR research group leader for ecosystem processes and dynamics. "It 
will kick-start a new generation of high-quality land surface 
products, with applications in climate change and avoiding 
desertification." Desertification is the gradual transformation of 
habitable land into desert due to climate change or destructive land 
use practices. 

The partnership began in spring 2008, when MISR science team member 
Michel Verstraete of the European Commission Joint Research Centre 
Institute for Environment and Sustainability (JRC-IES) in Ispra, 
Italy, participated in an intensive CSIR field campaign to study the 
environment around Kruger National Park, a major wildlife reserve in 
South Africa. The researchers studied the area using direct, airborne 
and space-based measurements. During the campaign, Verstraete learned 
of the widespread interest by the South African research community in 
remote-sensing techniques and applications. 

In response, JRC-IES and CSIR signed an agreement in July 2008 to 
facilitate the interaction and exchange of people, knowledge, data 
and software. 

NASA became involved in the collaboration in 2009 after a training 
workshop for MISR users in Cape Town, South Africa, organized by the 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Langley Research Center. Although the 
workshop sparked interest in the potential use of MISR data, it soon 
became apparent that accessing a large volume of data was a major 
hurdle for research and applications in developing countries in 
general and Africa in particular. While Internet connectivity in 
Africa has improved greatly in recent years, access and bandwidth 
remain too limited to support downloading vast data files. This led 
CSIR to host the data directly. 

NASA shipped most of the data on high-density tapes this summer. The 
agencies will ensure the database stays updated with current MISR 
observations by upgrading connectivity and facilitating sharing of 
data among participating academic and research institutions. 

"This multi-party collaboration will significantly strengthen academic 
and research institutions in southern Africa and support sustainable 
development of the entire subcontinent," said Verstraete, who will 
spend six months in southern Africa next year to help the regional 
remote-sensing community use the data. 

For more information about MISR, visit: 


http://misr.jpl.nasa.gov   

	
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