Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • [music] Narrator:

  • Holiday lights when seen from the ground give us cheer and help us celebrate the season.

  • But from space, over time, they can tell us something about both culture

  • and energy usage. Three years ago

  • a new satellite called Suomi NPP began to give us brilliant new views of the Earth

  • by day and by night. But as stunning as it is

  • to see Earth all aglow, this is still just one composite image

  • averaging observations over a period of months. Getting the

  • big picture from space is always helpful, but we can learn even more

  • seeing that picture change over time.

  • A NASA-lead team of researchers has been pouring over the data from NPP

  • and compensating for factors like the reflection of the moon and the effect

  • terrain, clouds, aerosols, to produce a scientifically-valuable

  • measuring Earth’s lights on a daily basis.

  • The first thing they noticed in the data was the effect of holidays.

  • Román:When we started looking at the data at night over the

  • we were expecting to see a lot of stability in the night time lights.

  • And we were really surprised to see this really vibrant increase

  • in activity during the holidays particularly around

  • areas in the suburbs.You have a lot of single-family homes

  • with a lot of yard space to put in lights.

  • Narrator:Comparing the six weeks between Thanksgiving and New Years to the rest of the year,

  • the team noticed large areas where night lights were 20, 30, even 50 percent

  • brighter over the holidays, as shown here in shades of green.

  • Román:And so what we are seeing is this shift in location

  • in activity where people are staying in their homes

  • and theyre celebrating, or theyre traveling to the rural areas

  • and theyre celebratingand theyre turning on the lights

  • . Whereas in the urban centers people are turning off the lights because theyre going off for the holidays.

  • Narrator:

  • Researchers actually first saw changes in holiday lighting patterns during Ramadan in the Middle East.

  • Román:In contrast to the western holidays of Christmas and New Years, during Ramadan

  • you don’t see a shift in activity in location. What youre seeing is that communities

  • are staying where they are, and theyre shifting their activities

  • to the nighttime.

  • Another thing that themeasurements are telling us is that it’s capturing cultural differences even

  • within a single community like the Muslim community

  • during the month of Ramadan. Were seeing patterns in behavior

  • that varies significantly from country to country,

  • a smaller increase in nighttime lights in Turkey, large increase of nighttime lights in

  • Saudi Arabia, no increase in nighttime lights in Israel

  • because it’s not a predominantly Muslim country. So it’s a lot of diversity seen within the data.

  • Narrator:Because the night light data has such good resolution,

  • researchers from Yale University have even been looking at

  • neighborhoods within cities, and correlating that data with known political and

  • socio-economic factors.

  • But from a NASA perspective, why is it important to concentrate on Earth’s lights from space?

  • Román:A lot of our capability focuses on

  • using satellites to get a global picture of where we are

  • with respect to the environment and with respect to the day-to-day processes

  • processes that drives the earth system. A big component of that is

  • human activity and how they are driving the different processes

  • that impact the earth like carbon emissions and

  • like the heating patterns across cities.

  • So by looking at the lights we can see changes in human behavior

  • throughout the seasons, throughout the days, and we can use

  • that information to then understand what are the

  • norms that are driving the decisions behind

  • energy. If you look at climate change

  • research right now, we know that more than 70 percent of emissions

  • are happening in cities. So NASA is putting a lot of emphasis

  • on understanding cities and understanding the dynamics

  • dynamics of how cities are interacting with the climate and our system as a whole.

  • [music]

  • [music]

[music] Narrator:

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it