Friday, March 11, 2022

Answer: What are some good (almost) real-time satellite image sources?

  Seeing the Earth from space... 




... is a truly remarkable ability. It literally changes your perspective.  What's even better, in these days of ever-cheaper costs to fly a satellite, and the increasing capabilities of small satellites, space images are becoming easier (and cheaper) to get. 

The Challenge for last week was to find good aerial or satellite images that are more-or-less in realtime.  As you can appreciate, the big problem is getting your hands on current images--or at least accurately time-stamped images from the not-too-distant past.  Getting near-real-time imagery would be great, but often that's outside the budget of many non-professional searchers. 

So today's Challenge is a kind of collective ask for all people who do SearchResearch: 

1. What are the best resources to get time-stamped satellite images?  How can an ordinary SearchResearcher get their hands on satellite images not very long after (or even during!) a major event?  

When faced with a problem like this, I usually start with my "list of" trick, beginnings with a search like this: 

     [ list of satellite image providers ] 

and sure enough, this gives a set of web pages that have long lists of potential sources (even including 4 ads at the top of the SERP pointing to commercial sources).  One of the more useful results here is "15 Free Providers" with links to several satellite image services.  (And, to tell the truth, I was expecting to find something like this on the results page.)  

Naturally, if you've got a bunch of sources like this, my natural inclination is to organize them on a Google Spreadsheet.  Not only does the sheet put everything I find into a single location, but as I read through the results, I'll find different properties of the image providers that I might want to sort or filter.  

Here's that spreadsheet.  Enjoy it. (And let me know if you find any errors.)  

I started just by collecting the links to many different providers.  Then, for each one, I explored a bit about what they offered, what they're good at, and the considerations to keep in mind.  

I found that the tradeoffs are always the same: cost (you can get nearly anything if you want to pay), resolution, and timestamps.  

That is, it's easy to get free low-res images without a particular time-stamp (such as by using Google Maps, Bing Maps, or Google Earth).  But if you're looking for images from one specific date (especially if it's recent), then you'll need to use one of the providers that gives you fine-grain control of your imagery.   

Examples: See Iroquois Reef--this place is under contention because of Chinese ships landing on/near the reef.  So, how can we monitor it?  One answer: Use DigitalGlobe (Maxar product) to select the image and time that matches your need: 

Iroquois Reef (P/C DigitalGlobe)

No fishing boats in sight on this Feb 27, 2022 image.  But if you look around in the Spratley Islands, fishing vessels aren't hard to find.  Here I used Google Earth to spot 7 fairly large ships anchored just west of Jones Reef (click on the image to see it enlarged):  

Jones Reef with ships in view (P/C Google Earth)

The big difference here is that while the Google Earth is a great satellite image, the only time/date information is that this image comes from Maxar, 2022.  (Google Earth aggregates many sources of satellite imagery, including Maxar.)  But if you go to DigitalGlobe, you can get the specific date of the image.    

Here is another pair of images of the Oxley area of Brisbane, Australia.  You can see the extent of flooding in the brown patches (previously green areas flooded by brown, silty water).  Both of these images are also from Maxar's DigitalGlobe.  

Brisbane Oct 27, 2021 (P/C DigitalGlobe)

Brisbane Mar 6, 2022 (P/C DigitalGlobe)



Another useful provider is the SentinelHub's Playground website.  You can quickly scrub through different parts of the world and select images by date.  Below is an image from Kiev taken on Feb 26, 2022.  (If you do this and look at the images from nearby dates, you'll quickly find out how many days Kiev is covered in clouds! It's hard to get a clear view.)  This is at 10m resolution, not great for seeing much detail, but at least we know what date this image was created.  

Kiev as of Feb 26, 2022 (P/C Sentinelhub Playground) 


However, sometimes you can find public images that are shared as part of a special series or collections.  Example: Soar has a wonderful collection of images, including this great high-res image of downtown Kiev as of Feb 28, 2022 Note that this isn't part of their usual image set (which is at much lower res), but a special collection.

St. Sophia Square, Kiev, Ukraine (Feb 28, 2022--30 cm resolution). P/C Soar.


You can see the differences in the images and resolution by comparing several different sources of the same (well-known) location.  Here are the pyramids as seen by different providers.  

Pyramids (P/C Google Earth on web browser)

Pyramids (P/C Bing Maps) 


Pyramids (P/C Mapbox)

If you look carefully, you can see differences in the buildings that are at the edge of the perimeter.  These are really taken at different times, although it's hard to get an exact date from these sources.  For specific times and dates, use another service, such as SentinelHub.  Here's that same location, but with a date-stamp of 2022-03-09: 

Pyramids (P/C SentinelHub's EO Browser)


Note that images are usually composed of multiple tiles, each of which might have been taken at a different time.  Here's an example where you can see the tile edges of a location near Kiev.  This is fairly typical as not every satellite pass over a given location will get all of the region in a single shot:  

Satellite photo showing tiling


SearchResearch Lessons 


There are many different mapping products with widely varying capabilities.  It's complicated by the fact that single companies sometimes offer multiple products, using some combination of their own images, their own analytics, and data from multiple other satellites giving multiple kinds of images (different analyses and different sensing bands).  

If you're a researcher, this an exciting time--so much opportunity!  

There are lots of companies creating new products, merging data sets, making new kinds of analytics with speed and frequency.  

I haven't even begun to cover the many aerial image companies that are also combining data to get areas with incredibly high resolution (for instance, NearSpaceLabs are flying balloons to get 10 cm data at reasonable cost.  (Probably not over restricted airspace, though, so don't expect anything from Kiev.)  

Bottom line: For reasonably high-res images WITH fairly recent time stamps, try SentinelHub's PlayGround or EO Browser.  Another solution would be Maxar's DigitalGlobe.  For higher-resolution, you can use other services, but be aware that you might have to spend some money to get those images--or hope that one of the providers image collections happens to also have what you seek.  

And, as always, stay tuned because this space is changing very quickly.  

Search on!  


FOOTNOTE:  This post took a few extra days to write solely because there ARE so many options out there: So many things to check out!  If you're just trying to do a bit of SRS on the cheap, now you know where to go.  But if you're doing this professionally, be sure to look for providers that specialize in your region of interest.  There are companies that do specialty services (e.g. business applications such as counting cars in a shopping mall, or doing agricultural crop health assessments), and there are companies that do speciality regions of the world (e.g., images of the coastline of North America, images over Australia, or imagery of South America). Search BEFORE doing a lot of work on your project! 

5 comments:

  1. Wow! Dr. Russell!

    Fantastic and very helpful and interesting. I haven't seen the spreadsheet, however, tried Digital Globe on mobile. It's awesome. I searched home. On mobile it's harder to recognize because the green rectangle is not available.

    Love the answer and the footnote. Learning what can be done and what is already there to use, it's amazing. I had no idea. Do you think some of those companies (in case someone needed the information and paid, could solve the SRS Challenge about irrigation that you solved years ago in a new, easier way?

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    Replies
    1. Tried your query adding 2022

      And found

      Top 9 free sources of satellite data [2021 update] some not on Dr. Russell's list. They add Google Earth

      https://www.skywatch.com/blog/free-sources-of-satellite-data

      And

      What does real-time satellite data really look like

      https://www.skywatch.com/blog/real-time-satellite-data

      Delete