Quantcast
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us

Chlorophyll in the Gulf of Tonkin

Credit: NASA, Posted on: Sunday, 14 December 2008, 07:00 CST Download full size image

During the Northern Hemisphere winter, monsoon winds over southern Asia and Australia stir the waters of the Gulf of Tonkin, off mainland China’s southeastern coast. Nutrients from deeper, colder waters ascend to the surface, giving rise to blooms of phytoplankton—microscopic plant-like organisms. Like all photosynthesizing organisms, phytoplankton are rich in chlorophyll, and some phytoplankton blooms are big and bright enough to be seen from space.

On December 2, 2008, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this image of the Gulf of Tonkin. Just as cream forms pale swirls in a cup of coffee, chlorophyll-rich waters form swirls of relatively light color in this gulf. Besides phytoplankton, suspended sediments also color the ocean waters, particularly off the western coast of Hainan.

For more information on ocean color, visit the Ocean Color Web at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.






More Images

Mars
South Polar Carbon Dioxide Ice Cap.This HiRISE image is of a portion of Mars' south polar residual ice cap. ...

Universe
Robert Satcher's Self-Portrait.Astronaut Robert Satcher uses a digital still camera to expose take a self-portrait during the STS-1...



redOrbit Friends


Quiz Me

Integrated Electronics Corporation is better known as what?
IEC
IE-Corp
Intel
Intelect
or View Results