Published March 19, 2023 | Version v0.2
Dataset Open

Annual time series of global VIIRS nighttime lights for 2000-2021 at 500-m spatial resolution extrapolated using logistic regression

Hengl, T.1 ORCID icon
  • 1. OpenGeoHub

Description

The Annual Visible Night Light (VNL) V2 (VIIRS) images at 500-m spatial resolution for the period 2012 to 2021 (Elvidge et al., 2021) have been used to extrapolate the values backwards for years 2000–2011. This was done by fitting a logistic regression (per pixel) and then predicting the values for the previous years (see nightlights_stack_500m.R). After consistent time-series have been produced, I also derived the difference between average of the years 2020/2021 and years 2000/2021 (nightlights.difference_viirs.v21_m_500m_s_2000_2021_go_epsg4326_v20230318.tif): this shows average rate of change for the 22 years period. Use with caution: extrapolation of values can lead to artifacts. For most of the land surface, however, it appears that the growth of night lights follows exponential growth function and hence nights in the past can be represented accurately by fitting decay / logistic regression function.

Original values from the Annual VNL V2 product have been converted from 0–200 to 0–2000 scale and are available as Cloud-Optimized GeoTIFFs.

To cite the Annual VNL V2, please use:

Historic night light images are also available (but at a much coarser spatial resolution) from:

Remote files

Funding awards

Additional details

See also

Created:
March 14, 2025
Modified:
March 14, 2025