| ISS012 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights |
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| ISS012-E-21250 |
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| Dust and Smog in Northeast China: Much of the land surface is
obscured in this oblique image of the North China Plain and parts of
Inner Mongolia. In this image, a mass of gray smog—mainly industrial
pollution and smoke from domestic burning—obscures Beijing and
surrounding cities. Numerous plumes with their source points appear
within the mass. Beijing suffers some of the worst air pollution in
the world from these chronic sources, and the characteristic colors
and textures of the smog can be easily seen through the windows of
the International Space Station. The pale brown material in Bo Hai
Bay, about 300 kilometers east of Beijing, is sediment from the
Yellow River and other rivers. Separated from the smog mass by a band of puffy, white cumulus clouds is a light brown plume of dust. The line of white clouds has developed along the steep slope that separates the heavily populated North China Plain—the location of the largest population concentration on Earth—and the sparsely populated semi-desert plains of Inner Mongolia. Most Northern Hemisphere deserts saw dust storms in the spring of 2006, and the Gobi and Taklimakan Deserts of western China were no exception. Dust plumes originating in these deserts typically extend hundreds of kilometers eastward, regularly depositing dust on Beijing, the Korean Peninsula, and Japan. Some plumes even extend over the Pacific Ocean. In extreme cases, visible masses of Gobi-derived dust have reached North America. An astronaut handheld-camera image taken in 1996 shows a broad corridor of smog moving off the mainland out into the Pacific Ocean from China’s more southerly population center near Taiwan. |
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This service is provided by the International Space Station program and the JSC Astromaterials Research & Exploration Science Directorate. Recommended Citation: Image Science and Analysis Laboratory, NASA-Johnson Space Center. "The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth." . |
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