In the southwestern corner of Western Australia, several large fires were burning on December 21, 2001, when NASA’s Aqua satellite passed overhead. Over the weekend of December 18, firefighters contained several lightning-triggered fires burning along the southern coast, but these large fires to the north continued to rage. The image above is made from observations from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on Aqua. Vegetation appears bright green, burned areas appear reddish-brown, the ocean appears blue-black, and seasonal, salty lakes appear turquoise.
The top image in the pair shows the wide-area view, while the bottom image shows an area of detail around Lakes Johnston and Hope at MODIS’ maximum spatial resolution of 250 meters per pixel. Red has been used to outline pixels in which MODIS detected active fire. Dark smoke spreads southeast from the fires. The close-up also reveals an unusual sight for this kind of image: a very bright, red-orange "glow" inside the fire-detection pixels.
The reddish color of the burned areas scattered across the top image in the pair comes from shortwave infrared energy reflected from the burned surface. The brightness of the red depends on the type of vegetation, how much ash and soot remain, and how recently the area burned. A red as intense as what appears inside the fire-detection pixels in the bottom image is very rare, however. The brightness suggests that MODIS was seeing more than just the shortwave infrared energy from the sun reflected back from a burned surface, but was also seeing shortwave infrared energy being emitted by intense flaming.
Image courtesy the MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center