

In 40 years, Japan will have more elderly people than any other advanced country. 50% of Tokyo's population is aged 25-59 those 65 or over will rise from 1980's 9% to 15.6% of the population in 2000. Wards around the city's center held 71% of the population in 1983, but had only 27% of its land mass outlying cities, towns, and villages held 28% of the population on 54% of the land. Within the metropolis' 23 wards, density per square kilometer was 14,023 persons in 1983, with Toshima ward containing 21,844 people per square kilometer. 5.9 million males and 5.8 million females, composing 4 1/ 2 million households, live in Tokyo's 2160 square kilometers. In recent years, Tokyo's population growth has slowed as the birthrate has fallen from a 1947 postwar high of 31. The Tokyo metropolis houses 11,892,016 people, 1/10 of the Japanese population. Goddard plays a leading role in NASA’s accomplishments by contributing NASA Goddard Space Flight Center enables NASA’s mission through four scientific endeavors: Earth Science, Heliophysics, Solar System Exploration, and Astrophysics.


In honor of Landsat’s 40th anniversary in July 2012, the USGS released the LandsatLook viewer – a quick, simple way to go forward and backward in time, pulling images of anywhere in the world out of the Landsat archive. The next Landsat satellite, now known as the Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM) and later to be called Landsat 8, is scheduled for launch in 2013.
#Jagged alliance 2 gold 1.12 launcher commands archive
Geological Survey (USGS) jointly manage Landsat, and the USGS preserves a 40-year archive of Landsat images that is freely available over the Internet. Department of the Interior through the U.S. (Landsat 5 TM Bands 7,4, 2) - NASA and the U.S. The constant circular spot of green in the dense city-center, visible on both images, is the Tokyo Imperial Palace and its gardens. A major expansion of Tokyo’s Haneda Airport, can be seen south of the city, on land built out into the bay. The urban reaches of metropolitan Tokyo have grown in both distance and density, as seen where the green color of vegetation has turned to pink and purple shades of urbanization. Twenty-two years later, Landsat 5, captured this second image of Tokyo on April 5, 2011. In the middle of the image, central Tokyo appears a deep purple just north of the bay. The upper half of Tokyo Bay is the large water body visible in a dark blue. Landsat 4 collected this first false-color image of Tokyo on Feb. The city’s growth has continued despite Japan’s overall stagnating population, mainly due to a continued trend of centralization—citizens moving out of the country and into the city. During the past two decades, Tokyo’s population has grown by more than 7 million. Tokyo is the world’s largest metropolitan region, home to nearly 37 million people. This great international seaport facility covers almost all of the bayfront and is home to over thirty million people. 5N, 140.0E) the capital city of Japan, Tokyo Bay and the neighboring cities of Yokohama, Kawasaki and Chiba are seen in this view of Japan.
