NASA satellite detects tree leaf changes as an early volcanic eruption warning signal

by SkillAiNest

NASA scientists may soon be able to monitor the volcanoes and predict how the trees respond to the space. Now, in a new collaboration with the Smithsonian Institution, they have discovered that the leaves of the trees grow when the passive volcanoes leave the Earth from the ground – the initial warning that a cone of magma is pushing upwards. Now, using the recent Evilo Mission satellite such as satellite and data, scientists believe that this biological reaction can be visible from afar, which currently acts as an additional layer of initial warning to spread in high -risk areas, which currently endanger millions of people worldwide.

NASA uses trees as a satellite indicator for the early warning of volcano eruptions in remote areas

According to research NASA’s land At the AIIMS Research Center, the science division, green, occurs when the trees absorb carbon dioxide when the magma rises. This emission is before sulfur dioxide and is difficult to detect directly from orbit.

Although carbon dioxide is not always clear in satellite images, its flow effects – for example – existing volcanoes can help strengthen the early warning system. This may be important because, as the American Geological Survey SaysThe country is still the most vibrant vibrant.

Globally, there are about 1,350 potentially active volcanoes, in many remote or harmful places. Gas measurement on the site is expensive and dangerous, indicating volcanic experts such as Robert Bog and Nicole Gaines to find trees -based proxies.

The studies of the Gain tree leaves have found a strong connection between the colors of the leaves and the underground volcanic activity around the Mount Atna of Sicily. Sitin -2 and Terra, such as Sentinel -2 and Terra, have been able to achieve these subtle plants, especially in forest volcano areas.

To confirm this procedure, climate scientist Josh Fisher led the NASA-Samasanian teams in March 2025, collecting trees samples in Panama and Costa Rica, and measured gas levels near the active volcano. Fisher looks at this interfaith research as a key to both of the volcanic predictions and the reaction of the long -term trees of environmental carbon dioxide, which will show future climate conditions.

The benefits of detecting early carbon dioxide have been demonstrated in the Philippines in the 2017 explosion of the Mayon volcano, where it allowed mass evacuation and saved more than 56,000 lives. It has limits, such as a bad region or too much environmental noise, but it can be a game changer.

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