New interactive map shows how light pollution affects your hometown

Get the Mach newsletter.

By Denise Chow

Scientists track pollution in the air as well as in the world’s oceans, lakes and rivers. And now, there’s a simple interactive tool that affords a detailed look at pollution of a different kind: artificial light.

The Radiance Light Trends website, which went live last week, presents a world map that shows where night skies are still relatively dark and where there are hot spots — areas where the blues and black indicating darkness are replaced by greens, yellows and reds indicating the glow of artificial light at night.

“The map shows light emissions on Earth, specifically on clear nights, because that’s when satellites can look down and see all the way to the ground,” said Christopher Kyba, a physicist at the German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam who coordinated the effort to build the website.

Artificial light disrupts the behavior of plants and animals, which evolved in a world without light from buildings, streetlights and other sources. In addition, light pollution has been linked to health problems in humans, including sleep disorders and obesity.

source: nbcnews.com