• About
  • Special Reports
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • Postcards From the Field
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive: 2015–2025
  • Policy Tracker
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos
  • AGU.org
  • Career Center
  • Join AGU
  • Give to AGU
  • About
  • Special Reports
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • Postcards From the Field
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive: 2015–2025
  • Policy Tracker
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos
Skip to content
  • AGU.org
  • Career Center
  • Join AGU
  • Give to AGU
Eos

Eos

Science News by AGU

Support Eos
Sign Up for Newsletter
  • About
  • Special Reports
  • Topics
    • Climate
    • Earth Science
    • Oceans
    • Space & Planets
    • Health & Ecosystems
    • Culture & Policy
    • Education & Careers
    • Opinions
  • Projects
    • Postcards From the Field
    • ENGAGE
    • Editors’ Highlights
    • Editors’ Vox
    • Eos en Español
    • Eos 简体中文版
    • Print Archive: 2015–2025
  • Policy Tracker
  • Blogs
    • Research & Developments
    • The Landslide Blog
  • Newsletter
  • Submit to Eos

Editors’ Highlights

Diagram from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

A New Workflow to Image the 3D Structure of Active Faults

by Patricia Martínez-Garzón 22 June 202322 June 2023

A new approach to illuminate 3D fault structures using earthquake hypocenters may improve our understanding of earthquake propagation and arrest across step overs.

Diagram from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Simulating the Journey of Pollen in the Atmosphere

by Jiwen Fan 19 June 202314 June 2023

A new study couples an emission and transport scheme of pollen from vegetation, and explores pollen’s evolution in different atmospheric conditions and its impacts on clouds and precipitation.

Two maps of the study area.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

A New Perspective on Aerosols and Emissions Over Northern China

by Ping Yang 15 June 202314 June 2023

During 2013-2019, a distinct seasonality for trends of aerosol concentrations and optical properties was found over Northern China.

A diagram from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Simulating Clouds on Arbitrary Grids in Any Spatial Direction

by Jiwen Fan 14 June 202314 June 2023

A new non-column based spectral element implementation of cloud microphysics enables full 3D flexibility in computing clouds and improves computational efficiency.

Graphs from the paper
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Modeling Whole Atmosphere Responses to the Hunga-Tonga Eruption

by Yuichi Otsuka 13 June 20238 June 2023

A high-resolution whole atmosphere simulation captures the strong, global responses up to the thermosphere and ionosphere following the Hunga-Tonga volcano eruption.

Graphs from the paper
Posted inEditors' Highlights

A 150-Day Periodicity is Revealed in the Southern Extratropics

by Sarah Kang 12 June 20238 June 2023

An internally generated 150-day periodicity is newly identified in the Southern Hemisphere extratropical large-scale atmospheric circulation, which arises from the annular mode’s propagating regime.

Photo showing technologies for monitoring volcanic gas emissions.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Send in the Drones: Safely Monitoring Volcanic Gas Emissions

by Paul Asimow 8 June 20238 June 2023

New drone technology was combined with satellite and ground-based data to improve volcanic gas flux monitoring at the remote Bagana Volcano in Papua New Guinea.

Diagram from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Are Low-Frequency Earthquakes Just Slow Slip?

by Marcos Moreno 5 June 202331 May 2023

Tests of seismic attenuation show fluid saturation and high pressure near a seismic source reduce high-frequency content, challenging the idea of slow slip as the cause of low-frequency earthquakes.

Map and graphs from the paper.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Machine Learning Helps Constrain the Thickness of Ancient Crust

by Emily Chin 1 June 202331 May 2023

A machine learning model trained using data on the chemical composition of magmatic rocks yields comparable, if not better, results to previously developed geochemical proxies.

Black and white photo of particles and a bar graph.
Posted inEditors' Highlights

Dust in the (Martian) Wind

by Laurent G. J. Montési and Germán Martinez 31 May 202330 May 2023

The InSight Lander, on Mars, intentionally dumped sand over its seismic instrument’s tether and the wind sorted the particles by size as it blew them away.

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 39 40 41 42 43 … 115 Older posts
Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

As Wildfires Increase in the West, So Does Suppression Spending

10 June 202610 June 2026
Editors' Highlights

Multi-Scale Fault Roughness Encapsulated in a Friction Law

11 June 202611 June 2026
Editors' Vox

Small-Scale Indian Ocean Dynamics Underpin Marine Ecology and Climate

4 June 20263 June 2026
Eos logo at left; AGU logo at right

About Eos
ENGAGE
Awards
Contact

Advertise
Submit
Career Center
Sitemap

© 2026 American Geophysical Union. All rights reserved Powered by Newspack