| ISS022 Earth Sciences and Image Analysis Photographic Highlights |
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| ISS022-E-78463 |
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| Houston, Texas at Night: Houston, Texas has been called the
“energy capital of the world” due to its role as a major hub of the
petroleum and other energy resource industries. The Houston
metropolitan area covers almost 2,331,000 hectares (9,000 square
miles) along the southeast Texas coastline, with an average elevation
of 13 meters (43 feet) above sea level and a population of over 5
million (2006 US Census estimate). The Houston metropolitan area is
also noteworthy as being the largest in the United States without
formal zoning restrictions. This has led to a highly diverse pattern
of land use at the neighborhood scale; nevertheless, more general
spatial patterns of land use can be recognized in remotely sensed
data. This is particularly evident in nighttime photography of the
urban area taken by astronauts on board the International Space
Station. The image depicts the roughly 100 kilometer (60 mile) east-west extent of the Houston metropolitan area. Houston proper is at image center, indicated by a “bull’s-eye” of elliptical white to orange-lighted beltways and brightly lit white freeways radiating outwards from the central downtown area. Suburban and primarily residential urban land uses are indicated by both reddish-brown and gray-green lighted regions that reflect a higher proportion of tree cover and lower light density. Petroleum refineries along the Houston Ship Channel are identified by densely lit areas of golden yellow light. Rural and undeveloped land rings the metropolitan area, and Galveston Bay to the southeast (image lower right) provides access to the Gulf of Mexico. Both types of non-urban surface appear dark in the image. You can see more nighttime imagery of cities, and learn about techniques that astronauts use to photograph them in the Earth Observatory feature Cities at Night. |
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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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