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MODIS Sea Surface Temperature from 2002 to 2006 around Australia
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A recent study indicates there is a correlation between ocean nutrients and changes in sea surface temperature (SST). The results show that when ocean water warms, marine plant life in the form of microscopic phytoplankton tend to decline. When water cools, plant life flourishes. Changes in phytoplankton growth influence fishery yields and the amount of carbon dioxide the oceans remove from the atmosphere. This could have major implications on the future of our ocean's food web and how it relates to climate change. The temperature data in this visualization comes from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) onboard NASA's Terra and Aqua spacecraft. In order to see the correlation between SST and SeaWiFS data, this animation can be compared to 'SeaWiFS Biosphere Data over Australia'. Please click here to see this other animation.
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This animation shows a 32-day moving average of SST data around the world and around Australia. This data continuously loops from July 4, 2002 to October 23, 2006.
Duration: 2.7 minutes
Available formats:
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Frames
(Australian Sea Surface Temperatures)
1280x720 (60 fps)
Frames
(Australian Sea Surface Temperatures)
320x180
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249 KB
160x80
PNG
60 KB
80x40
PNG
15 KB
512x288 (30 fps)
MPEG-1
38 MB
1280x720 (30 fps)
MPEG-2
142 MB
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