Experience Earth on any device. See all Earth versions. Google Earth on web. Google Earth on mobile. Explore the globe with a swipe of your finger.
Available on Android and iOS. Google Earth Pro on desktop. Tell your story with Google Earth. Meet three people who are using Google Earth to protect rivers, inspire students, and revisit their birth country.
Google Earth in Action. The India Literacy Project teamed up with Google Earth to take children around India on virtual field trips and learn about their world. Behind the Scenes of 3D Imagery. Google Earth is the most photorealistic, digital version of our planet. Where do the images come from?
How are they they put together? And how often are they updated? Geo for Good. Once upon a time, the program carried a steep price tag. But Google has been giving it away for free for the past few years.
Google Earth Pro uses a 3D modeling system , that allows users to build to-scale models of landmarks and buildings. If you prefer to see the actual buildings, you can go to street-view or view the thousands of pictures that users uploaded. You can use layers to add or remove features such as roads, photos, parks, trails, 3D buildings and more. When Google first released Earth Pro it came with a steep price tag. However, in they decided to release it to the public for free.
This depends on the location. Some places are updated more frequently than others. You can request for a location to be updated, but there is no guarantee how quickly that will happen. In addition, there is a Historical Imagery option that allows you to scroll back to previous versions of the map. Scientists, researchers, and developers use Earth Engine to detect changes, map trends, and quantify differences on the Earth's surface.
Earth Engine is now available for commercial use, and remains free for academic and research use. See our impact on the Earth from a new perspective through 37 years of satellite imagery in Timelapse in Google Earth. Timelapse is one example of how Earth Engine can help gain insight into petabyte-scale datasets. The public data archive includes more than thirty years of historical imagery and scientific datasets, updated and expanded daily. It contains over forty petabytes of geospatial data instantly available for analysis.
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