Select your localized edition:

Close ×

More Ways to Connect

Discover one of our 28 local entrepreneurial communities »

Be the first to know as we launch in new countries and markets around the globe.

Interested in bringing MIT Technology Review to your local market?

MIT Technology ReviewMIT Technology Review - logo

 

Unsupported browser: Your browser does not meet modern web standards. See how it scores »

Fighting a wildfire requires knowing exactly how it is moving and where hot spots are flaring. The image at left–of a fire that burned parts of Santa Barbara County, CA, earlier this year–was produced by an experimental system that uses remote sensors to provide just such information to emergency responders, rapidly reporting changing conditions. The image was captured by a 118-kilogram infrared scanner in an unmanned airplane. Images were processed onboard, sent via satellite to a ground station, fused with geographic-­information-­system data, and displayed using Google Earth–all within minutes. Areas of the greatest heat intensity show up as the brightest spots on the image. Once tests are completed next year, the U.S. Forest Service may install the sensor-and-communication system in manned aircraft.

0 comments about this story. Start the discussion »

Image by NASA

Tagged: Computing, Google, imaging, sensor, mapping

Reprints and Permissions | Send feedback to the editor

From the Archives