Abstract

The physiology and behavior of most life at or near the Earth’s surface has evolved over billions of years to be attuned with our planet’s natural light–dark cycle of day and night. However, over a relatively short time span, humans have disrupted this natural cycle of illumination with the introduction and now widespread proliferation of artificial light at night (ALAN). Growing research in a broad range of fields, such as ecology, the environment, human health, public safety, economy, and society, increasingly shows that ALAN is taking a profound toll on our world. Much of our current understanding of light pollution comes from datasets generated by remote sensing, primarily from two missions, the Operational Linescan System (OLS) instrument of the now-declassified Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) of the U.S. Department of Defense and its follow-on platform, the Day-Night Band (DNB) of the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) instrument on board the Suomi National Polar-Orbiting Partnership satellite. Although they have both proved invaluable for ALAN research, sensing of nighttime lights was not the primary design objective for either the DMSP-OLS or VIIRS-DNB instruments; thus, they have some critical limitations. Being broadband sensors, both the DMSP-OLS and VIIRS-DNB instruments suffer from a lack of spectral information. Additionally, their spatial resolutions are too low for many ALAN research applications, though the VIIRS-DNB instrument is much improved over the DMSP-OLS in this regard, as well as in terms of dynamic range and quantization. Further, the very late local time of VIIRS-DNB observations potentially misses the true picture of ALAN. We reviewed both current literature and guiding advice from ALAN experts, aggregated from a diverse range of disciplines and Science Goals, to derive recommendations for a mission to expand knowledge of ALAN in areas that are not adequately addressed with currently existing orbital missions. We propose a stand-alone mission focused on understanding light pollution and its effects on our planet. Here we review the science cases and the subsequent mission recommendations for NITESat (Nighttime Imaging of Terrestrial Environments Satellite), a dedicated ALAN observing mission.

Highlights

  • At every moment, half of the Earth experiences night

  • There are a number of examples of current or recent remote night light imaging from orbits beyond the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP)-Operational Linescan System (OLS) and Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS)-Day-Night Band (DNB) instruments

  • Light pollution is a novel, significant, and global environmental threat that ranks among the defining characteristics of a proposed geologic era known as the “Anthropocene” [124]

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Summary

A Case for a New Satellite Mission for Remote Sensing of

Barentine 1,2, *,† , Ken Walczak 3,† , Geza Gyuk 3,† , Cynthia Tarr 3,† and Travis Longcore 4,5. Case for a New Satellite Mission for Remote Sensing of Night Lights. Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affil-. International Dark-Sky Association, 5049 E Broadway Blvd, Suite 105, Tucson, AZ 85711-3646, USA. Consortium for Dark Sky Studies, University of Utah, 375 S 1530 E, RM 235 ARCH, Salt Lake City, UT 84112-0730, USA.

Introduction
Science Goals
ALAN Research Areas in Need of Expanded Remote Sensing Data
Ecology
Environment
Economy
Policy and Society
Public Safety
Human Health
Characterization
Existing Orbital Data
Limitations of Currently Available Data
NITESat Mission Requirements
Ground Scale
Spectral Coverage
Sensitivity
Dynamic Range
Coverage
Temporal Sampling
Mission Duration
Overpass Times
Calibration
Science Traceability Matrix
Findings
Discussion
Summary
Full Text
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