Evilphd666 [he/him, comrade/them] to news • 2 years agoNew China Balloon slop - "MAY HAVE" had radar that ...SEES THROUGH CLOUDS...you know like modern satellite tech.external-linkmessage-square20 fedilinkarrow-up168file-text
arrow-up168external-linkNew China Balloon slop - "MAY HAVE" had radar that ...SEES THROUGH CLOUDS...you know like modern satellite tech.Evilphd666 [he/him, comrade/them] to news • 2 years agomessage-square20 Commentsfedilinkfile-text
minus-squareMF_COOM [he/him]hexbear5·edit-22 years agoShit I guess I should stop robbing these trains under cover of cloud link
minus-squareblobjim [he/him]hexbear1·edit-22 years agoThat's how Google Earth can show you what the earth looks like without clouds, as far as I know. I might actually be completely wrong, idk. I guess they could always wait for a non-cloudy moment to take a picture. link
minus-squareabc [he/him, comrade/them]hexbear5·edit-22 years agoNah, they just use False Color (infrared and whatnot) and SAR (microwaves can penetrate clouds and bounce back, allowing you to 'see' through it). Highly recommend these two NASA pages for learning more: https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/features/FalseColor https://www.earthdata.nasa.gov/learn/backgrounders/what-is-sar This example of False Color for a satellite image of Bangor is a good example , the cloud obscures the northern part of the city under red light, but you can see 'past' it if you look at the shortwave infrared light. link
minus-squareMF_COOM [he/him]hexbear1·2 years agoHahaha my dude Google Earth is not live it is a high-def composite image holy shit :michael-laugh: link
minus-squareblobjim [he/him]hexbear3·2 years agoyeah they use images from other companies. Which have to be taken at some point. link
Wait modern satellites can see through clouds
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Shit I guess I should stop robbing these trains under cover of cloud
Have you used Google Earth before?
Yes?
That's how Google Earth can show you what the earth looks like without clouds, as far as I know. I might actually be completely wrong, idk. I guess they could always wait for a non-cloudy moment to take a picture.
Nah, they just use False Color (infrared and whatnot) and SAR (microwaves can penetrate clouds and bounce back, allowing you to 'see' through it).
Highly recommend these two NASA pages for learning more:
This example of False Color for a satellite image of Bangor is a good example , the cloud obscures the northern part of the city under red light, but you can see 'past' it if you look at the shortwave infrared light.
Hahaha my dude Google Earth is not live it is a high-def composite image holy shit :michael-laugh:
yeah they use images from other companies. Which have to be taken at some point.