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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!



Easily Share Workflows With the Analytics Repository

Easily Share Workflows With the Analytics Repository

10/27/2025

With the recent release of ENVI® 6.2 and the Analytics Repository, it’s now easier than ever to create and share image processing workflows across your organization. With that in mind, we wrote this blog to: Introduce the Analytics Repository Describe how you can use ENVI’s interactive workflows to... Read More >

Deploy, Share, Repeat: AI Meets the Analytics Repository

Deploy, Share, Repeat: AI Meets the Analytics Repository

10/13/2025

The upcoming release of ENVI® Deep Learning 4.0 makes it easier than ever to import, deploy, and share AI models, including industry-standard ONNX models, using the integrated Analytics Repository. Whether you're building deep learning models in PyTorch, TensorFlow, or using ENVI’s native model creation tools, ENVI... Read More >

Blazing a trail: SaraniaSat-led Team Shapes the Future of Space-Based Analytics

Blazing a trail: SaraniaSat-led Team Shapes the Future of Space-Based Analytics

10/13/2025

On July 24, 2025, a unique international partnership of SaraniaSat, NV5 Geospatial Software, BruhnBruhn Innovation (BBI), Netnod, and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) achieved something unprecedented: a true demonstration of cloud-native computing onboard the International Space Station (ISS) (Fig. 1). Figure 1. Hewlett... Read More >

NV5 at ESA’s Living Planet Symposium 2025

NV5 at ESA’s Living Planet Symposium 2025

9/16/2025

We recently presented three cutting-edge research posters at the ESA Living Planet Symposium 2025 in Vienna, showcasing how NV5 technology and the ENVI® Ecosystem support innovation across ocean monitoring, mineral exploration, and disaster management. Explore each topic below and access the full posters to learn... Read More >

Monitor, Measure & Mitigate: Integrated Solutions for Geohazard Risk

Monitor, Measure & Mitigate: Integrated Solutions for Geohazard Risk

9/8/2025

Geohazards such as slope instability, erosion, settlement, or seepage pose ongoing risks to critical infrastructure. Roads, railways, pipelines, and utility corridors are especially vulnerable to these natural and human-influenced processes, which can evolve silently until sudden failure occurs. Traditional ground surveys provide only periodic... Read More >

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Seeing More Than Just The Surface

Anonym

When remote sensing first got going, it was really expensive. If you were going to go to all the trouble and expense of building a costly, finicky, short-lived instrument and put it in orbit, you really needed to be finding gold, silver, oil, or protecting national security.

By the mid to late 90s, remote sensing wasn’t nearly so exotic. Some data were free, or at least acceptably low cost for graduate students. But the most common attitude was still that anything getting in the way of mapping terrain and bedrock was an irritation at best. This included but was not limited to vegetation, clouds, the atmosphere, and night. Just getting the “bare bones” right was challenge enough. A common data preparation step was, and often still is, called “atmospheric correction”. Like it was doing something wrong. Go ahead, try doing without the atmosphere and all its incorrect behaviors.

Well, here we are in 2013, and the former obstacles are now desirable earth science remote sensing fields in their own right. There are dozens and dozens of great sensors in orbit now. Here are some of my favorites for making sense of the less rocky parts of earth.

  • If you want to know about the atmosphere, get aboard the NASA A-Train, a constellation of satellites (5+) teeming with sensors (15+). It’s like an earth sciences championship team. Each instrument is a real expert at what it does and together they’re amazing. The data from these instruments, and more are being launched, give a full picture of earth’s atmosphere and water. That’s no small feat, and it would be hard to find topics more important to us than air and water. Best part? The data are available to all via the cleverly named A-Train Data Depot.
  • Climate can be difficult to study, but Eumetsat has done a great job of making it easy to get current data. Their family of sensors and satellites serve up geospatial data on sea ice, ozone, and more, all available through the Earth Observation Portal.
  • The Japanese space agency, JAXA, often partners with NASA and others on earth observation missions. They have had spectacular success on missions like ALOS-PALSAR. Their new data gateway, G-Portal, is very useful. Want to know about aerosol thickness in the atmosphere in the mid latitudes last summer? Just follow the steps! It’s as easy as clicking “next”.
  • Need to know about the really big picture on weather? Check out the NOAA Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC) data products for mapping the incredible impact of solar storms and their effects.
  • How about weather in motion, over a whole hemisphere? Get the geostationary picture from the NOAA Geostationary Satellite Server.
  • Get a look at Earth at night, including thermal wonders and our own activities using the NOAA CLASS gateway for NPP VIIRS data and more!
  • Groundwater, ocean height and movement, and landforms are all gravity-mapped in exquisite detail by GRACE, and the data are waiting for you at the Physical Oceanography Distributed Active Archive Center, along with ocean salinity from AQUARIUS and winds from QuikSCAT.

The possibilities for discovery in earth science are pretty much unlimited, and the need has never been greater. We’re very fortunate to live in a time where getting the data to start the research is only an online search away. So get exploring!

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