Now you don't see it:
And now you do:
Envisat/ASAR radar satellite image (black-and-white inset) taken at 10:48pm the previous day (June 21). Color backdrop is June 22 MODIS/Aqua image. ASAR data courtesy of CSTARS.Bad news today - an ROV bumped into the LMRP containment cap that had recently been diverting about 700,000 gallons of oil a day from the leaking well to vessels at the surface. The LMRP has been removed for repair and, as of right now, oil is gushing unchecked from the Macondo well, possibly at a rate as high as 2.5 million gallons (60,000 barrels) per day. See the spill cam video here.

A few topical references from ASTM F2534 Standard Guide for Visually Estimating Oil Spill Thickness on Water
ReplyDeleteMacDonald, I. R., Guinasso, Jr., N. L., Ackleson, S. G., Amos, J. F.,
Duckworth, R., Sassen, R., and Brooks, J. M., “Natural Oil Slicks in
the Gulf of Mexico Visible from Space,” Journal of Geophysical
Research, Vol 98, No. C9, 1993, pp. 16,351-16,364.
Hollinger, J. P., and Mennella, R. A., “Oil Spills: Measurements of
Their Distributions and Volumes by Multifrequency Microwave
Radiometry,” Science, Vol 181, 1973, pp. 54-56.
Parker, H. D., and Cormack, D., Evaluation of Infrared Line Scan
(IRLS) and Side-looking Airborne Radar (SLAR) over Controlled Oil
Spills in the North Sea, Warren Spring Laboratory Report, 1979.