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Space & Spaceflight

This Is What a Volcanic Eruption Looks Like in Satellite Radar

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Back on November 23rd, the Pico do Fogo volcano on Cape Verde’s Fogo island erupted. This image shows how that incident looked when it was captured by the Sentinel-1A satellite’s radar sensors.

In fact, the European Space Agency satellite captured two images: one before the event on November 3rd and then another afterwards on the 27th. By processing the two images together to measure differences in radar phase on the two dates, scientists could create a radar interferogram which shows with great accuracy the change in height of the ground beneath.

The result is this rainbow-colored image, showing the major shifts that occurred on Pico do Fogo’s slopes. Now, Earth scientists are using these images to help them map the volcano’s subsurface magmatic system. [ESA]

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