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  1. Cirrus (band) Cirrus were an American electronic dance music group formed in 1995 in Los Angeles, California, United States. The group was composed of Aaron Carter and Stephen James Barry. In live performances, the group often added live instrumentation such as guitar and bass to the electronic background. [1]

  2. Aug 3, 2013 · Landsat 8's Band 9 (1.360-1.390 µm) provides detection of high-altitude cloud contamination that may not be visible in other spectral bands. Cirrus clouds appear bright while most land surfaces will appear dark through cloud-free atmospheres containing water vapor. The Operational Land Imager Band 1 ( 0.433-0.453 µm ) on Landsat 8 and Landsat ...

  3. Cirrus. Hailed in 1997 as the new Prodigy -- mostly by their record label -- Cirrus was born in Los Angeles as the project of Aaron Carter and Stephen James Barry. The duo program acid and trance breakbeats for…. Read Full Biography.

  4. Cirrus Band (Band 9) High, thin cirrus clouds can be hard to spot in satellite images. Both the clouds and their shadows can interfere with measurements. Landsats 8 and 9 are designed to detect these clouds by measuring light in the part of the electromagnetic spectrum where the clouds are most visible.

  5. Cirrus is an American big beat group formed in 1995 in Los Angeles, California. Sites: cirruscirrus.com , Wikipedia. Members: DJ Aaron Carter, Laura Derby, Rene Padilla, Stephen James Barry. Copy Artist Code. Edit Artist. Shop now. Discography.

  6. Landsat 8 measures different ranges of frequencies along the electromagnetic spectrum – a color, although not necessarily a color visible to the human eye. Each range is called a band, and Landsat 8 has 11 bands. Landsat numbers its red, green, and blue sensors as 4, 3, and 2, so when we combine them we get a true-color image such as this one:

  7. landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov › satellites › landsat-8Landsat 8 | Landsat Science

    OLI provides two new spectral bands, one tailored especially for detecting cirrus clouds and the other for coastal zone observations. The OLI collects data for two new bands, a coastal/aerosol band (band 1) and a cirrus band (band 9), as well as the heritage Landsat multispectral bands.