Artificial island arises off Dubai

These two SAR images of the coastline of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates were acquired by ERS-2 on 20 May 1999 and Envisat on 21 April 2003. The latter image shows the Palm Jumeirah development under construction. <br> <br>Credits: ESA

The rapidly changing face of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates is portrayed by contrasting Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images taken less than four years apart, most notably as a whole new artificial island is seen to rise from the seabed.

An initial radar image of Dubai was taken by ERS-2’s SAR instrument in May 1999. The coastal city has since been re-imaged by the Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) instrument aboard Envisat, ESA’s latest Earth Observation satellite. Unlike optical imagery, SAR images work by mapping surface roughness, based on the strength of radar backscatter reflected back up to space.

The increased white areas in the Envisat ASAR image compared to the ERS-2 image from 1999 – caused by radar reflecting strongly off building surfaces – are evidence of changes as mass construction programmes continue to develop the city.
Nowhere is this more apparent than the ambitious Palm project set offshore. After several years of planning, construction was started on twin €1.2 billion islands – The Palm, Jumeirah (seen here) and The Palm, Jebal Ali – in 2001. Work began after the ERS-2 image acquisition while the Envisat image shows significant progress being made.

The creation of the two palm-shaped artificial islands will increase Dubai’s shoreline by 120 km. They are comprised of approximately 100 million cubic metres of rock and sand. Situated on the Palms will be over 60 luxury hotels, 5000 residential villas, 5000 apartments, marinas, water theme parks, restaurants, shopping malls, sports facilities, health spas, cinemas and numerous dive sites. The intention is to cap the city’s growing reputation as a tourist location.

A number of people have already taken the opportunity to purchase property on the Palm including footballer David Beckham. And he won’t be lonely: he’ll have England teammate Michael Owen as a neighbour as well as four ex-teammates from Manchester United.

The Palm is the latest in a number of innovative projects in the Jumeirah Beach, Jebal Ali area of the city including the six-star Burj al Arab hotel, seen on the image just north of the base of the Palm Jumeirah.

The most ambitious project however begins this year as land reclamation starts on “The World” – a series of 200 islands situated off the Dubai coast built in the shape of the world. The project is due to finish in 2008, and promises a view well suited for satellite imagery.

Media Contact

Frédéric Le Gall ESA

All latest news from the category: Earth Sciences

Earth Sciences (also referred to as Geosciences), which deals with basic issues surrounding our planet, plays a vital role in the area of energy and raw materials supply.

Earth Sciences comprises subjects such as geology, geography, geological informatics, paleontology, mineralogy, petrography, crystallography, geophysics, geodesy, glaciology, cartography, photogrammetry, meteorology and seismology, early-warning systems, earthquake research and polar research.

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

A chip unique in the world

A team from UPV and iPRONICS has manufactured the first universal, programmable and multifunctional photonic chip on the market. A team from the Photonics Research Laboratory (PRL)-iTEAM of the Universitat…

Advance in light-based computing

…shows capabilities for future smart cameras. UCLA-developed experimental device demonstrates ability to reduce glare in images. Researchers developing the next generation of computing technology aim to bring some light to…

Evidence for reversible oxygen ion movement during electrical pulsing

…enabler of the emerging ferroelectricity in binary oxides. In a recent study published in Materials Futures, researchers have uncovered a pivotal mechanism driving the emergence of ferroelectricity in binary oxides….

Partners & Sponsors