What’s causing the hot spot?

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What’s causing the hot spot?

At least 75 researchers study methane leaks in Four Corners
This photograph of a laptop computer screen shows a storage tank spewing methane gas next to a natural-gas facility near Aztec, as seen from a thermal camera imaging system operated by Andrew Thorpe of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Researchers recently flew over the area as they worked on a project to identify the causes of significant methane leaks.
Andrew Thorpe of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, powers up a thermal camera imaging system next to a storage tank at a natural-gas facility near Aztec. Researchers were in the Four Corners this spring working on a unique collaborative study to reveal the cause of the methane concentration over the area.
Several natural-gas production facilities are in the San Juan Basin area near Bloomfield, N.M. A hot spot in the region is responsible for producing the largest concentration of the greenhouse gas in the nation.
From left, Eric Kort of the University of Michigan, Christian Frankenberg of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Colm Sweeney with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Gabrielle Petron gather at the Durango-La Plata County Airport in April before boarding planes to fly over a methane “hot spot” in the region.
Seth Chazanoff of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory removes a lens cap to a Hyperspectral Thermal Emission Spectrometer pointing down from within an aircraft used to study methane emissions in the Four Corners.
Mackenzie Smith of the University of Michigan calibrates testing equipment that will be used in the aerial monitoring of methane levels in the Four Corners.

What’s causing the hot spot?

This photograph of a laptop computer screen shows a storage tank spewing methane gas next to a natural-gas facility near Aztec, as seen from a thermal camera imaging system operated by Andrew Thorpe of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Researchers recently flew over the area as they worked on a project to identify the causes of significant methane leaks.
Andrew Thorpe of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, powers up a thermal camera imaging system next to a storage tank at a natural-gas facility near Aztec. Researchers were in the Four Corners this spring working on a unique collaborative study to reveal the cause of the methane concentration over the area.
Several natural-gas production facilities are in the San Juan Basin area near Bloomfield, N.M. A hot spot in the region is responsible for producing the largest concentration of the greenhouse gas in the nation.
From left, Eric Kort of the University of Michigan, Christian Frankenberg of NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Colm Sweeney with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Gabrielle Petron gather at the Durango-La Plata County Airport in April before boarding planes to fly over a methane “hot spot” in the region.
Seth Chazanoff of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory removes a lens cap to a Hyperspectral Thermal Emission Spectrometer pointing down from within an aircraft used to study methane emissions in the Four Corners.
Mackenzie Smith of the University of Michigan calibrates testing equipment that will be used in the aerial monitoring of methane levels in the Four Corners.
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