The Alps.
Snow across the western United States.
Clouds surrounding the Aleutian Islands.
>>2624424
Dust storm over the Middle East.
Fires burning across the southeastern United States.
Dust storm over northern Africa.
>>2624430
Moving over the Mediterranean Sea.
Phytoplankton bloom in the Atlantic Ocean.
Anderson Creek Fire on the Kansas-Oklahoma border.
>>2624431
Snow across the central United States. Fires surrounding the burn scar from the Anderson Creek Fire on the Kansas-Oklahoma border can be seen as well.
>>2624422
looks like a giant frozen tentacle. don't defrost it or cthulu will ravash your women. o wait you like that sort of thing. carry on
Sea Ice and cloud streets in the Labrador Sea.
Snow across the central United States.
Plume from Mount Pavlof in Alaska.
>>2625499
Fires burning in Chile.
Dust storm over the Gobi Desert.
Snow in south central Russia.
Low clouds over the Yellow Sea and the East China Sea.
Widely scattered fires burning in Mexico.
Southeastern Europe.
Dust storm over the Mediterranean Sea
Fires burning in the central United States. The burn scar from >>2624433 can still be seen.
New York City.
Dukono erupting on the island of Halmahera, Indonesia.
Mount Fuji.
Op loves MODIS too?
>>2624422
ohhh i love the swiss alps
Grand Erg Oriental, Saharan sand dunes in Algeria.
>>2627466
You bet.
Fort Raleigh National Historic Site, Roanoke Island, North Carolina.
Ash accumulations on the Kuril Islands, Russia, following the eruption of Chikurachki.
>>2625498
What website are you getting these pics from?
Can we get some more of the Himalayas?
Bumping with Eyjafjallajökull.
Snow across the midwestern, northeastern United States, and Canada in early April.
Lake Shasta, California.
Val Strem, Tujetsch, Switzerland.
Ascension Island in the south Atlantic Ocean.
Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming.
Tropical Cyclone Zena (18P) in the South Pacific Ocean.
Dust storm in the Sahara Desert.
Fires in southeast Asia.
>>2626783
Dust storm over the Sea of Japan.
Fires in eastern Europe.
Fires in northern India and Nepal.
Nansen Ice Sheet, Drygalski Ice Tongue, Priestley and Reeves Glaciers in Antarctica.
Fires in Australia.
>>2633104
In northwestern Australia.
Tropical Cyclone Fantala (19S) in the South Indian Ocean.
>>2633953
The Great Lakes.
Fires in eastern Kansas and northeast Oklahoma.
>>2635467
Near Madagascar.
Yellowstone National Park.
>>2636996
>>2636980
Lake Hinds, Western Australia.
>>2638450
sorry for comemnting
Tropical Cyclone Amos (20P) in the South Pacific Ocean.
Rocky Mount Fire, Virginia.
>>2624422
I've heard that spy satellites have resolution powerful enough to count the hairs on a fly's back from orbit. I'd love to see some retardedly huge images where you can zoom in to that level of detail, like google maps but without switching to different image collages at every zoom level.
The file would probably be unmanageably huge, though. Magic computers when?
>>2642188
>I've heard that spy satellites have resolution powerful enough to count the hairs on a fly's back from orbit.
Not even close anon. And never will be able to. Resolution is limited by wavelength of light. Period
>>2642268
There's always a possibility
Santa Cruz, Bolivia.
Severe thunderstorms over the Great Plains.
>>2642188
haha good one
>>2642450
It seems like there is a possibility if you can't into physics.
>>2642188
Not from that distance
Not with the atmosphere
Not with any weather
Not with any camera made
Satellites have a pretty broad scope at best. If you're interested in any "real time" atmospheric satellite imagery, go to:
http://www.goes.noaa.gov/
>Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite system, used for weather observation by meteorologists and some pilots
http://www.aviationweather.gov/satellite
>Aviation weather satellite imagery (scroll to the International Images). This almost all of the Earth imaged, except for the far north/south latitudes
wait...
are you >>2642268 saying that ''LIGHT'' is an entity (or species) and has a monthy menstrual cycle?
... --or-- ...
are >>2642268 ~> yoU (asssuming and falsely) believing that human beings have not yet --nor-- ever will develop a lens that can see the purple public hairs on a hermaphroditic Earth ambeo while looking through a telescope andeating a Bologna sandwich next to the black hole of tella-omaga-tRon-thRee-36Z-octain.
..because buddy >>2642268 ...you gotta lot to Learn !
Good thread op!
>>2655359
oh
is an airport
>>2642450
>There's always a possibility
Physics student here, I'm afraid it really isn't possible. Light defracts (i.e expands outward from a point source, the reflection of light off of a hair on a fly's back is such a point source), and the individual photons from the fly (if they hadn't been stopped by the atmosphere, which most are) would be at least meters apart by the time they reached orbit, to create a telescope that could physically capture that light would be hard enough since it would have to be absolutely huge, but even then the amount of noise light from other things would mean that you'd never be able to see it.
>>2659755
Pluto.
https://earthview.withgoogle.com/