Oil Leak

The May 24th, view of the BP oil leak from MODIS. Click for a larger version. Credit: Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC

This from the MODIS satellite today (taken on May 24th).

Scary stuff.  I hate the way we go about these things,  probably it would be a good idea to stop pointing fingers and covering butts and start doing some clean up.  IMHO,  it’s a little late but I think we need to get representation from all the potentially affected people/groups together and get a unified game plan worked out.  It sounds to me like the right hand doesn’t know what the left hand is doing and we are winding up with a (insert your own adjective here) response to this mess.

From the MODUS page with this image, and by the way pay the MODIS site a visit for more versions of the image above:

Sunlight illuminated the lingering oil slick off the Mississippi Delta on May 24, 2010. The MODIS on NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image the same day.

Oil smoothes the ocean surface, making the Sun’s reflection brighter in some places, and reducing the scattering of sunlight in other places. As a result, the oil slick is brighter than the surrounding water in some places (image center) and darker than the surrounding water in others (image lower right). The tip of the Mississippi Delta is surrounded by muddy water that appears light tan. Bright white ribbons of oil streak across this sediment-laden water.

Tendrils of oil extend to the north and east of the main body of the slick. A small, dark plume along the edge of the slick, not far from the original location of the Deepwater Horizon rig, indicates a possible controlled burn of oil on the ocean surface.

To the west of the bird’s-foot part of the delta, dark patches in the water may also be oil, but detecting a manmade oil slick in coastal areas can be even more complicated than detecting it in the open ocean.

When oil slicks are visible in satellite images, it is because they have changed how the water reflects light, either by making the Sun’s reflection brighter or by dampening the scattering of sunlight, which makes the oily area darker. In coastal areas, however, similar changes in reflectivity can occur from differences in salinity (fresh versus salt water) and from naturally produced oils from plants.

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