How much sunlight the surface reflects, monthly (MISR)
What it measures. A monthly global summary of how much sunlight the surface reflects (albedo), plus a measure of haze in the air and a breakdown of the types of airborne particles.
How it's made. Built from the nine-angle MISR camera system on NASA's Terra satellite, with Level 2 results averaged over a month onto 1-degree and 5-degree grids.
How & where you'd use it. Used to study how reflective Earth's surface is and how that changes through the seasons, which affects how much solar energy the planet absorbs and, in turn, climate.
What's measured
Coverage & cadence
- Time span1999-12-18 → ongoing
- Measured byTerra (MISR)
- Processing levelLevel 3
- Spatial extent-180, -90, 180, 90
- FormatsHDF-EOS2
- 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
MISR Level 3 Component Global Albedo is a publicly available product covering a month, to be used starting with MISR Release V3.2. MIL3MAL_006 is the Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) Level 3 Component Global Albedo product covering a month version 6. It contains a statistical summary of column albedo 555-nanometer optical depth and a monthly aerosol compositional type frequency histogram. This data product is a global summary of relevant Level 2 albedo parameters, averaged over a month and reported on a geographic grid, it has multiple data layers, with varying temporal resolutions of 1 degree by 1 degree, and 5 degrees by 5 degrees. Data collection for this product is ongoing. The MISR instrument consists of nine push-broom cameras that measure radiance in four spectral bands. Global coverage is achieved in nine days. The cameras are arranged with one camera pointing toward the nadir, four forward, and four aftward. It takes seven minutes for all nine cameras to view the same surface location. The view angles relative to the surface reference ellipsoid are 0, 26.1, 45.6, 60.0, and 70.5 degrees. The spectral band shapes are nominally Gaussian, centered at 443, 555, 670, and 865 nm. MISR is designed to view Earth with cameras in 9 different directions. As the instrument flies overhead, each piece of Earth's surface below is successfully imaged by all nine cameras in 4 wavelengths (blue, green, red, and near-infrared). The goal of MISR is to improve our understanding of the effects of sunlight on Earth and distinguish different types of clouds, particles, and surfaces. Specifically, MISR monitors the monthly, seasonal, and long-term trends in three areas: 1) amount and type of atmospheric particles (aerosols), including those formed by natural sources and by human activities; 2) amounts, types, and heights of clouds, and 3) distribution of land surface cover, including vegetation canopy structure.
Get the data
import earthaccess
earthaccess.login(strategy="netrc") # free Earthdata Login
results = earthaccess.search_data(
short_name="MIL3MAL",
version="006",
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
- How to cite ASDC data VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- NASA EOS ATB Documents: MISR VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- MISR Level 3 Component Products Quality Statement - December 1, 2005 VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- MISR Level 3 Current Monthly, Seasonal and Annual Production Report VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- MISR Level 3 Cloud Fraction by Altitude Product Quality Statement - January 04, 2018 VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Overview of MISR Data at the ASDC, 2023 VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- ASDC Overview of MISR File Naming and Versioning Conventions VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- ASDC overview of MISR Level 3 Albedo and Cloud Versioning VIEW RELATED INFORMATION