Sensors and Systems
Breaking News
​​​GEO Business 2026 breaks attendance records with 6,200+ professionals
Rating12345Over 6,200 professionals headed to GEO Business 2026, cementing its position...
Trimble Opens Entries for the 2026 Construction Innovation Awards
Rating12345Award program recognizes organizations leveraging technology to drive innovation,...
Air Pollution’s Daily Pulse Over the Northeast 
Rating12345New observations from NASA’s TEMPO mission are providing an...

October 11th, 2011
Monitoring Our Seas From Space

  • Rating12345

A team from the IOI-Malta Operational Centre, made up of Alan Deidun, Aldo Drago, Adam Gauci, Joel Azzopardi and Anthony Galea, recently conducted a research project in which they statistically compared ocean colour values from satellites with in situ values collected in the field. Ocean colour can be used to gauge the productivity of a marine area since it is the measure of suspended chlor-ophyll pigment as gleaned from space. Chlorophyll, in turn, is a pigment found in microscopic plants known as phytoplankton (which are the basis of marine food webs) which is used by such organisms to harvest sunlight to make sugars in a process known as photosynthesis. Read More