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Mapping our global human footprint by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Jun 13, 2019
The number of people flocking to cities in search of employment and better prospects is growing at an unprecedented rate. By 2050, the global population is estimated to reach nine billion, 70% of which will be living in urban areas. The World Settlement Footprint 2015 (WSF-2015) is the first map, using mass collections of radar and optical satellite imagery, to provide a global overview of the world's human settlements. The rapid and unplanned urban growth along with the rise in population density brings challenges, such as increased air pollution, inadequate infrastructures and greater vulnerability if disaster strikes. The importance of effective city planning and development will be essential in managing these urban swells. ESA's Urban Thematic Exploitation Platform (U-TEP) and its new WSF-2015 dataset helps do just that. This product has been generated with support of the U-TEP by exploiting the methodology developed in the framework of the ESA SAR for urbanisation monitoring (SAR4URBAN) project lead by the German Aerospace Center (DLR). The global map, with its high spatial resolution, is based on a multi-temporal analysis of over 700,000 Copernicus Sentinel-1 radar and Landsat-8 multispectral satellite images, collected during 2014-15. The new WSF-2015 dataset has been integrated on the U-TEP Visualisation and Analytics Tool, which includes additional data sets such as topographic and social media data, as well as socio-economic statistics, and also gives the user the option of uploading specific geographic information. The U-TEP multi-source data and tools, all available in a single platform, aims to provide comprehensive information to help scientists, planners and decision-makers in creating and maintaining sustainable urban environments (in major cities but also in smaller, rural areas), as well as documenting changes over time. An interactive webinar, explaining how the tool works and its many functions, will take place on the 24 June. "U-TEP will benefit from the new WSF-2015 data, particularly in view of services for more effective urban planning and service provision, enhanced risk analysis related to natural disasters, or improved assessment of human impact on ecosystems," says Mattia Marconcini, who managed the WSF-2015 development at DLR. The global availability of high-quality data on urban growth is of primary importance in particular in data-poor countries. The use of these data is particularly important for the UN's Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11), which aims to make cities and human settlements resistant and safe, and also the new Urban Agenda, which focuses on a more sustainable future for both developing and developed countries. With these goals in mind, DLR, in partnership with Google Earth Engine Team, is currently producing an extended version that will soon be available on U-TEP: the WSF-Evolution. The WSF-Evolution will use six million satellite images from 1985 to 2015, almost the complete archive of the US Landsat missions, to illustrate the worldwide growth of human settlement on a year-by-year basis. This new feature will be released later this year. The availability of the WSF datasets and big data analytical capabilities of the U-TEP platform allows us to build a knowledge base on what is urgently required for achieving sustainable urban development goals and making well-informed policy decisions. Both U-TEP and WSF-2015 are funded by ESA. U-TEP is one of seven Thematic Exploitation Platforms developed by ESA to serve data user communities. These cloud-based platforms provide an online environment to access information, processing tools and computing resources. The TEPs allow knowledge to be extracted from large datasets produced through the Copernicus programme, as well as other Earth observation satellite missions.
Magnetism discovered in the Earth's mantle Munster, Germany (SPX) Jun 10, 2019 The huge magnetic field which surrounds the Earth, protecting it from radiation and charged particles from space - and which many animals even use for orientation purposes - is changing constantly, which is why geoscientists keep it constantly under surveillance. The old well-known sources of the Earth's magnetic field are the Earth's core - down to 6,000 kilometres deep down inside the Earth - and the Earth's crust: in other words, the ground we stand on. The Earth's mantle, on the other hand, st ... read more
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