Raw full-Earth camera images from deep space (DSCOVR EPIC)
What it measures. Raw, calibrated images of the entire sunlit face of the Earth in ten narrow color bands from ultraviolet to near-infrared.
How it's made. Captured by the EPIC camera on NOAA's DSCOVR spacecraft, positioned about a million miles away at the Earth-Sun L-1 point, then corrected for stray light and sensor effects into Level 1A images.
How & where you'd use it. A foundational image product used to derive measurements of ozone, aerosols, clouds, vegetation and surface UV. Most people encounter it through those higher-level products or the full-disk Earth imagery.
What's measured
Coverage & cadence
- Time span2015-06-13 → ongoing
- Measured byDSCOVR (EPIC)
- Processing levelLevel 1A
- FormatsHDF5
- StatusACTIVE
What you can do with it
- Map air pollutants — NO₂, aerosols, ozone
- Track greenhouse gases and Earth's energy budget
- Feed weather and air-quality analysis
Official description
Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) is a 10-channel spectro-radiometer (317 – 780 nm) onboard National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) DSCOVR spacecraft located at the Earth-Sun Lagrange-1 (L-1) point giving EPIC a unique angular perspective that is used in science applications to measure ozone, aerosols, cloud reflectivity, cloud height, vegetation properties, and ultraviolet (UV) radiation estimates at Earth's surface. EPIC provides ten narrow-band spectral images of the entire sunlit face of the Earth using a 2048x2048 pixel Charge Coupled Device (CCD) detector coupled to a 30-cm aperture Cassegrain telescope. EPIC collects radiance data from the Earth and other sources through the Camera/Telescope Assembly. EPIC has a field of view (FOV) of 0.62 degrees, sufficient to image the entire Earth. Because of DSCOVR's tilted (Lissajous) orbit about the L‐1 point, the apparent angular size of the Earth varies from 0.45 to 0.53 degrees within its 6-month orbital period. Depending on the season, a complete set of per-band images is taken every 60 to 100 minutes. Accompanying instrument metadata and a series of calibrations and corrections are applied to convert the images to Level 1A format properly. The significant corrections are for flat‐fielding and stray light. Flat-fielding is based on measurements with a uniform light source to measure the differences in sensitivity for each of the 4 million pixels. The resulting correction map is applied to the estimated counts from the CCD. Stray light was measured in the laboratory using a series of small-diameter light sources entering the telescope and imaged on the CCD. A similar set of measurements has been performed on orbit using the moon. The illumination of pixels outside the primary diameter of the light source was measured to produce a detailed matrix map of the entire stray light function, and the resulting stray light correction was applied to every image. Other corrections are also used based on laboratory measurements. For wavelengths longer than 550 nm, there are back-to-front interference effects in the partially transparent CCD (etaloning) that must also be removed from measured radiance. DSCOVR EPIC Level 1A Version 4 collection contains data collected over the Earth not obstructed by the Moon. For data collected during lunar transit events, users should see collection DSCOVR EPIC Level 1A Miscellaneous Version V1. For data collected for the Moon only (without the Earth in the field of view) users should see collection DSCOVR EPIC Level 1A Miscellaneous Version V1. The Level 1A products contain calibrated and geolocated EPIC images with ancillary metadata. These data products are in HDF5 format.
Get the data
import earthaccess
earthaccess.login(strategy="netrc") # free Earthdata Login
results = earthaccess.search_data(
short_name="DSCOVR_EPIC_L1A",
version="4",
bounding_box=(-122.5, 37.2, -121.8, 37.9), # your area (W,S,E,N)
temporal=("2024-01-01", "2024-12-31"), # your dates
)
files = earthaccess.open(results) # stream straight from LARC_CLOUD Browsing CMR needs no login. Downloading or streaming bytes needs a free Earthdata Login + the earthaccess package. Official links
- NASA Captures "EPIC" Earth Image Article from July 20, 2015 VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- A New Blue Marble By Scott Kelly, NASA Astronaut VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- ASDC Data and Information for DSCOVR VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Discover Article "Canadian Wildfire Smoke Was So Widespread it Was Visible From Nearly a Million Miles Away." By Tom Yulsman, May 27, 2023 VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Earth Observation Portal Page for DSCOVR Mission Information VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- NASA Goddard Twitter Page VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- NASA Leadership Blog, DSCOVR’s First Light on the Future by Buzz Aldrin VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- NASA Studies High Clouds, Saharan Dust from EPIC View VIEW RELATED INFORMATION