@pkok yeah, there's obviously a huge amount of national and commercial stuff that you can't access (or have to pay for: the best publicly available commercial imagery nowadays is almost certainly better than what the US had access to for most of the Cold War). That said, the free offerings are really cool. Landsat is low-res optical imagery that's been running forever (you could independently go measure the last 30 years of land clearing in the Amazon), and the Sentinel program covers a huge range of data: optical, radar, IR bands for temperature measurement, spectroscopy for atmospheric gas quantification… the data are all available online from the ESA for anyone interested to go wild with
SAR imagery does not have amazing spatial resolution, but is often good enough to do things like identify shipping. Water is a uniquely flat surface, so metal objects floating on water give a good return against a low background signal*. Some computationally demanding image processing later, and you can pick out ship locations. I've got a vague idea that it could be interesting to find ships in the territorial waters of North Korea, correlate against AIS tracks, and try to find some sanction-busting shipping running dark without AIS.
*This makes me wonder: the USSR really struggled with power requirements for the radar on its RORSAT ocean-monitoring satellites, to the point that it ended up having to power them using the only nuclear reactors to be launched into space. Why is SAR so much more efficient?
I've got a hobby-interest in remote sensing (satellite imagery). Over the past couple of days, I've been playing around with data from the ESA's Sentinel-1 mission. The ESA (being cool and European Union-y) makes most of the data from Sentinel series of satellites freely accessible to the public, and provides some decent software for processing and analysing the data.
Sentinel-1 is a synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite. I don't fully understand the physics behind SAR, but it's basically an active radar measurement of the ground track the satellite passes over. Different surfaces give different sorts of radar returns (measured as a change in polarisation), and so SAR can be used to classify different terrains (crops, forests, grasslands, rock, etc), like in the false-colour image of Flevoland I've attached. Resolution is moderate: for Sentinel-1, each pixel ends up being about 4x4 m on the ground.
@black_sun I feel that might well depend a lot on your student-supervisor relationship! Mine has been happy to let me pursue whatever seemed most interesting at the time, which has almost entirely been my own projects. With hindsight I really could have done with more direction, but I've certainly had an interesting time
@deejoe So do I! Been running lots of diffusion experiments recently, looking into controlling motion in free solution with host-guest binding. Now, if only I could get those convection currents to dampen down a little I'd be in business...
@arteteco Thank you! I'm not 100% sold on subject-focused instances making sense in the long term (am I more a researcher, or a film fan? or should I self-sort based on my politics?), but maybe it'll help get M off the ground
@kara@witchcraft.cafe That sucks. I'm close to the end of a PhD now: no idea if I'll committing to carry on with research, but I've had a pretty good time doing it so far. That said, the horror stories I've heard of life-sucking American grad research culture make me really fucking glad to have done my work in Australia, where you're allowed to go home in the evening and stay home at the weekend.
@GIMcGrew Another one here! Who have you found?
@qwert@mastodon.technology I wasn't there for forums in the 90s, but I was on lots in the early 2000s and I think they were pretty similar. The major thing was the stability of the userbases: it was *hard* to find communities of any sort of like-minded individuals during that era of the internet, so any that you did find became very valuable. A good forum in 2005 could well have a significant chunk of the members it had had in 1995, as well as newer people making an effort to integrate with the already-existing community.
@black_sun hah, thanks. That thesis deadline is starting to get awfully close…
I honestly have no idea if I'll be looking for research work after my PhD or not, but so far I'm glad I decided to do it. Being given the time and support to spend a few years working on cool projects with minimal oversight is pretty great :)
@freemo hah, don't set your expectations too high but we'll see. Currently doing lots of analytical work and not as much synthesis, but feel free to ask any questions you might have and I'll do my best
#introduction to the above: forgot it the first time because I've been at work for too long
@freemo That was absolutely something I meant to do, which somehow slipped my mind. Thank you!
Hey all! I'm an Australian PhD student working in supramolecular chemistry (mainly photoswitch related, with lots of supporting NMR studies). Alongside the chemistry I play music, dance, and have interests in politics/international relations/global security (any open-source analysts hanging around here?).
I've tried mastodon on and off a few times before this account, but never really managed to find a critical mass of enough others with shared interests to keep me here. With all the interest M's been picking up recently, it seemed like it might be worth trying again!
PhD student working with visible-light photoswitches, supramolecular chemistry, NMR spectroscopy. Musician. Some politics.