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eppur_se_muova

(36,260 posts)
Sun May 3, 2015, 11:21 AM May 2015

Satellite data reveals extent of damage in Katmandu earthquake (LiveScience)


Mount Everest Shrank As Nepal Quake Lifted Kathmandu
by Becky Oskin, Senior Writer | April 29, 2015 10:13pm ET

The first good view of the aftermath of Nepal's deadly earthquake from a satellite reveals that a broad swath of ground near Kathmandu lifted vertically, by about 3 feet (1 meter), which could explain why damage in the city was so severe. The data also indicate the tallest mountain in the world, Mount Everest, got a wee bit shorter.

The new information comes from Europe's Sentinel-1A radar satellite. Scientists are racing to interpret the Sentinel data, which were made available today (April 29) just hours after the satellite passed over Nepal. The preliminary data can help guide relief efforts on the ground by identifying areas that were damaged or hit by landslides.

Researchers detected the vertical shift in the ground by comparing before-and-after radar images from the satellite using a technique that produces an image called an interferogram. The resulting images have rainbow-colored areas that represent the movement of the ground between the times each radar image was taken. Each colorful fringe on the European Space Agency's Nepal interferogram reflects about 1 inch (2.8 centimeters) of vertical movement. The results will be refined in the coming weeks, with as scientists further analysize the images and additional data from satellites become available. [[link:http://|See Images of the Kathmandu Uplift & Other Nepal Quake Effects]]

According to the early analysis, a region 75 miles (120 kilometers) long by 30 miles (50 km) wide lifted upward by as much as 3 feet during the earthquake, said Tim Wright, a geophysicist at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom. This uplift peaked only 10 miles (17 km) from Kathmandu, even though the city was relatively far from the earthquake's epicenter.

"That's one of the reasons why Kathmandu has so much damage," Wright told Live Science.
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more: http://www.livescience.com/50677-nepal-earthquake-radar-satellite-view.html
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