Extreme wildfire is Canadaa driverless car. And it veered close to a major NASA center.
After erupting in wooded hills outside of Los Angeles' community of Altadena, the Eaton Fire — one of the damaging conflagrations impacting the region — catastrophically burned through homes and businesses, destroying 4,627 structures as of Jan. 15. The catastrophe has injured firefighters and taken lives. A NASA instrument, riding in an airplane, has captured a stark view of the burned area — and reveals how close it came to NASA's legendary Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
The lab closed on Jan. 8 as the area was evacuated during critical fire conditions. It's responsible for building and leading such missions as Voyager, the Mars rovers, and endeavors around other worlds.
The view below shows the impacts as of Jan. 11, when the fire had burned 14,117 acres. You're seeing an image captured by NASA's AVIRIS-3 instrument, or Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer-3, which flies aboard high-altitude aircraft on Earth observation missions.
- The most burned and impacted neighborhoods, with charred trees and burned buildings in Altadena and portions of adjacent communities, are shown in dark brown, though other brown and green areas burned, too.
- The burned wildland areas, where the fire (the cause of which is under investigation) started, appear in orange.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As the image above shows, fire came closer than 1 kilometer, or 0.6 miles, from JPL.
Conditions were ripe for flames. A notably hot summer parched vegetation — July 2024 was California's hottest month on record — combined with a near-record dry fall and then a potent windstorm to drive fire and far-traveling embers into urban areas.
With vegetation turned to kindling, the flames couldn't be stopped.
The JPL campus has so far remained unscathed. But not so its employees.
"Thankfully, the laboratory remains untouched by fire due to the brave dedication of our first responders," the center recently posted online. "But our community has been seriously impacted with over 150 JPLers who have lost their homes, and many more remain displaced."
Topics NASA
Reading the Viaduct by Jessica Vivian ChiuHoliday … Cheer? by Sadie SteinBrave New Turkeys: We Have a Winner! by The Paris ReviewLouise Bourgeois, Untitled, 1994 by The Paris ReviewContingencies by Lynne TillmanGrass Libraries, and Other News by Sadie SteinContingencies by Lynne TillmanThe Dickens Museum, and Other News by Sadie SteinA Conspiracy in a Teapot by Sophie Pinkham“Psalm 139” by Lorin SteinGrass Libraries, and Other News by Sadie SteinWilliam Styron in Letters, Part 5 by William StyronLost Ferraris, and Other News by Sadie SteinPelican Art, and Other News by Sadie SteinPleasure Domes with Parking by Aaron GilbreathWilliam Styron in Letters, Part 5 by William Styron“Psalm 139” by Lorin SteinReading the Viaduct by Jessica Vivian ChiuThe Hatchet Falls by Sadie SteinSaved by John Jeremiah Sullivan The Gym as a Historical Temple of Fitness Why one person hired the Island Boys on Cameo to quit their job for them Watch a New Documentary on Nazoranai, an Experimental Trio Staff Picks: Rage, Reggae, Reading Rooms by The Paris Review Piglets & Ghosts: The Unique Thrills of Mexican Paperbacks 2021 revived pop 3 Google Pixel 8 rumors ahead of its October reveal YouTube demonetizes Russell Brand's channel following allegations Solitude Is the Hardest Thing to Find Reggae in the Seventies; Cannes in the Fifties How Do You Make Art Last Forever? TikTok's Tube Girl has everyone talking P. G. Wodehouse Will Squash You Like a Bug Nabokov Knew How to Hate a Party Best Amazon Echo Show deal: Get a refurbished Echo Show up to 47% off Thomas Morley: My Mistress’ Face Peter Saul’s “Pictures with Problems” Strife in the Fast Lane “Mating” Book Club, Part 4: Socialism vs. Capitalism. Fight. Timothée Chalamet, Kylie Jenner, and the internet's fixation on PR relationships
2.7437s , 10132.546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Canada】,Exquisite Information Network