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NASA satellite image shows just how isolated North Korea is from the rest of the world

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I have an update to the North Korea by night entry I posted several days after Kim Jong Il’s death in December 2011. At the time, I wrote “perhaps there is no better visualization of the isolation and oppression that the North Koreans live under”. I would like to amend that statement to reflect this updated set from NASA’s Earth Observatory (link).

We see with even more clarity the isolation of North Korea in direct contrast to the prosperity of the South. The lights literally run up to the 38th parallel and end. Full stop. Unbelievable.

The reason we can see these lights so clearly is that the image contains wavelengths through the visible spectrum up to infrared using NASA's Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometry Suite (VIIRS) satellite. Filtering and post-processing allow everything from city lights, wildfires, gas flares, and yes, even fishing boats (check out the seaborne lights) to be visible.

David Wogan is an engineer and policy researcher who writes about energy, technology, and policy.

David's academic and professional background includes a unique blend of technology and policy in the field of energy systems. Most recently, David worked at Austin Energy, a Texas municipal utility, implementing a Department of Energy stimulus grant related to energy efficiency. Previously, David was a member of the Energy & Climate Change team at the White House Council on Environmental Quality for the Obama Administration.

David holds two Master's degrees from The University of Texas at Austin in Mechanical Engineering and Public Affairs. While at UT, David was a researcher in the Webber Energy Group, where his research focused on advanced biofuel production to offset petroleum use in the transportation sector. David holds a Bachelor's of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering from The University of Texas at Austin, where he researched nuclear non-proliferation measurement technology.

David is a 2013 Aspen Institute Journalism Scholar, joining a select group of journalists from Slate, ABC News, and The New York Times.

David lives in Austin, Texas. Follow along on Twitter or email him at david.wogan@me.com.

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