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Aw, shucks: imaging company GeoEye could not capture a super high-resolution image of Obamas inauguration today from space.
For those who just cant accept the bad news from GeoEye, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield snapped an image (seen above) of an illuminated Washington, D.C. several days before the inauguration. The day before the event,special education. astronauts aboard the International Space Station captured a picture (seen below) of the greater National Mall area.
Christopher MacManusCrave freelancer Christopher MacManus is satellite view Clouds ruin GeoEyes satellite image of inaugurationnow investing his energy writing for CNET after covering the Sony brand on various Web sites of his own for nearly a decade. In his free time, he enjoys cycling, FPS gaming, and his miniature Australian shepherd.
This detailed view shows the Potomac River and its bridges at left, with National Mall at the center, stretching eastward from the Lincoln Memorial to the Washington Monument toward the Capitol building, where the inaugural ceremony will be held, NASA officials said in a statement.
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Using its GeoEye-1 and IKONOS satellites positioned 423 miles above the Earth, the company tried and iled -- due to clouds -- on two separate attempts to capture the image of the inauguration, a GeoEye representative told CNET. GeoEye planned to release an interactive map of the ceremony with a built-in zoom and a slider that would have let the user compare this years image to the one captured four years ago. Feel free to zoom around in the 2009 Inauguration image embedded below.
A nighttime shot of Washington, satellite radio Canadian Satellite Radio Holdings Changes Name D.C. taken on January 19.
In 2009, GeoEye released a satellite image of Obamas first Inauguration that clearly revealed the hundreds of thousands of people who attended the landmark event, which takes place on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.
Hoping to see a space shot of President Barack Obamas inauguration? Unfortunately, the weather ruined any opportunity at a good image, but astronauts snapped some relevant pictures to whet your whistle.