• MODIS Pic of the Day 09 October 2022

    From Dan Richter@1:317/3 to All on Sun Oct 9 12:00:44 2022
    October 9, 2022 - Fall Colors in New England

    Fall colors
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    The forests of northern New England were nearing peak autumn color on
    October 6, 2022. That’s the same date that the Moderate Resolution
    Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on board NASA’s Terra satellite
    acquired a true-color image of a stunning flush of orange painting the
    high elevations between Montreal, Canada to Massachusetts, United
    States and from the Adirondacks to the White Mountains.

    Each autumn, the changing colors of deciduous leaves paint North
    America with glorious shades of yellows, oranges, reds, and browns. The
    transition starts in the north and in high elevations as early as
    mid-September then sweeps downslope and southward until it is completed
    in mid-November. The changing of leaf color in temperate forests
    involves several causes and reactions, but the dominant factors are
    sunlight and heat.

    As daylight begins to shorten in late summer and autumn, tree and plant
    leaves produce less chlorophyll, the green pigment that harvests
    sunlight for plants to convert water and carbon dioxide into sugars.
    The subsidence of chlorophyll allows other colorful chemical compounds
    contained in the leaves, such as carotenoids and flavonoids, to become
    visible.

    The leaves of different deciduous tree species (the type that drop
    their leaves in the fall) contain a variable mix of pigments, and this
    means that they produce different colors in autumn. Oaks generally turn
    red, brown, or russet; hickories become golden bronze; aspen and
    yellow-poplar turn golden. Maples differ by species. Red maple turns
    brilliant scarlet; sugar maple, orange-red; and black maple, yellow.
    Leaves of some trees, such as elms, simply become brown. New England’s
    forests contain an abundance of deciduous trees and also are rich in
    coniferous trees, which do not drop their needles in the fall, but
    remain green year-round.

    Image Facts
    Satellite: Terra
    Date Acquired: 10/6/2022
    Resolutions: 1km (252.7 KB), 500m (668 KB), 250m (1.5 MB)
    Bands Used: 1,4,3
    Image Credit: MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC



    https://modis.gsfc.nasa.gov/gallery/individual.php?db_date=2022-10-09

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