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NV5 Geospatial Blog

Each month, NV5 Geospatial posts new blog content across a variety of categories. Browse our latest posts below to learn about important geospatial information or use the search bar to find a specific topic or author. Stay informed of the latest blog posts, events, and technologies by joining our email list!



New ENVI Agent, IDL Agent, and GeoAgent Quick Guides

New ENVI Agent, IDL Agent, and GeoAgent Quick Guides

6/9/2026

The recent release of ENVI® Agent, IDL® Agent, and GeoAgent™ revolutionize how users interact with geospatial software. These agentic AI applications act as partners to plan, simplify, and execute complex workflows. Knowing where to start can be challenging for new users. To this end, we developed three new quick guides to... Read More >

Introducing NISAR Data Support

Introducing NISAR Data Support

6/5/2026

The release of ENVI® SARscape 6.3 in April 2026 includes preliminary support for NASA-ISRO SAR (NISAR) data. The NISAR mission is a joint Earth-observing satellite project between NASA and the Indian Space Research Organization designed to monitor changes in the planet’s land and ice surfaces using advanced radar imaging. It... Read More >

Monitoring Illegal Mining in the Amazon: Turning Persistent Data Into Actionable Insight

Monitoring Illegal Mining in the Amazon: Turning Persistent Data Into Actionable Insight

5/28/2026

Illegal mining over decades has constituted one of the most persistent and complex socio-environmental problems in the Brazilian Amazon. In recent years, with the increasingly intensive use of mechanized extraction, the associated environmental impacts—such as deforestation, intense soil disturbance, river siltation, and mercury... Read More >

From Answers to Action: Why ENVI and IDL Agents Go Beyond General AI

From Answers to Action: Why ENVI and IDL Agents Go Beyond General AI

4/20/2026

As generative AI tools like Claude and Gemini continue to gain traction, many organizations are asking the same question: Can general purpose AI actually support real geospatial workflows, or does it stop at surface-level answers? That question was front and center in our recent webinar, Meet Your New Partners in Science: ENVI... Read More >

Mapping Earthquake Deformation in Taiwan With ENVI

Mapping Earthquake Deformation in Taiwan With ENVI

12/15/2025

Unlocking Critical Insights With ENVI® Tools Taiwan sits at the junction of major tectonic plates and regularly experiences powerful earthquakes. Understanding how the ground moves during these events is essential for disaster preparedness, public safety, and building community resilience. But traditional approaches like field... Read More >

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Detecting the Holuhraun Volcanic Eruption with NPP VIIRS

Anonym

A volcanic eruption North of the Vatnajökull glacier in Iceland has been ejecting lava through the Earth's crust for a few weeks now, and the event is now being hailed as "comparable to some of the most famous volcanic eruptions in human history."

I wondered if there was still evidence of these eruptions taking place on the surface, so rather than flying to Iceland, I went to NOAA's CLASS website to see if I could find anything. After some time searching through imagery taken by the NPP VIIRS sensor, I found the right one.

I loaded the imagery in to ENVI to do radiometric calibration, GLT-reprojection, and bowtie correction to get rid of the striping that occurs in NPP VIIRS. Once finished, it looks like this:

Image from NPP VIIRS, taken at 14:17 GMT on September 23

The bands used in this image are at 640, 865, and 1610 nanometers. This means that the blue band is tied to visible light, the green band to near Infrared, and the red band to short wave infrared. This is why highly reflective ice, snow, and clouds are blue, and areas with plant life on land are green.

But what about the red band? If we zoom in on Iceland, this is what we see:

It is no surprise that there is a strong thermal signature in red coming from the Holuhraun area, as there is lava on the surface of the planet. This area is hot, and will continue to emit thermal radiation for some time. Lava has actually been flowing in Holuhraun since the last volcanic eruption there - this newest spurt of volcanic activity has merely added to the already existing lava on the surface.

NPP VIIRS has an extremely wide swath and large pixel size, making it hard to use for spatially smaller events. However, weather patterns and volcanic eruptions are on a scale large enough to be not only detected with NPP, but monitored as well. With ENVI becoming time aware with the imminent release of ENVI 5.2, there are going to be some amazing analytics to employ that can show how these large scale events evolve.

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