Start Date: End Date: Published Date Data Date
Data acquired March 3, 2000 540 x 540 59 KB - JPEG
Data acquired March 3, 2000 2288 x 2288 276 KB - JPEG
Data acquired March 3, 2000 2288 x 2288 15 MB - TIFF
Thermal-Infrared (TIR) Image (color)
This ASTER thermal-infrared composite image, the first high spatial resolution multispectral thermal infrared data from satellite, is of an area in the Afar Triangle, about 60 km to the south of image 2. It shows color variations which are mainly due to rock and soil composition differences; temperature differences are expressed as brightness variations. Areas shown in the red hues on the left and right sides are probably underlain by rocks with high silicon-dioxide content, whereas those areas appearing white and lavender in the central part are a more mafic composition, dominantly basaltic lava flows and cinder cone deposits. The dark areas within the complex of basaltic rocks are mainly domes, which are highly fractured. The multispectral thermal-infrared capability of ASTER will permit compositional determinations that are not possible in the shorter wavelength regions. The ten very bright pixels in the lower center of the image show high temperatures of molten lava in the summit crater of the active Erta Ale volcano.
(The size of image: 60km x 60km approx., ground resolution 90m x 90m approx. A decorrelation stretch was applied to bands 10, 12 and 14 in blue, green and red respectively.)
ASTER Instrument Team, MITI, ERSDAC, JAROS, NASA JPL,
Published March 3, 2000 Data acquired March 3, 2000