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Remote sensing

High water flow in the Brahmaputra River
Posted inScience Updates

When Floods Cross Borders, Satellite Data Can Help

by F. Hossain, M. Bonnema, N. Biswas, S. Ahmad, B. Duong and N. D. Luong 15 February 201925 May 2022

With so many eyes in the sky, residents living downstream from dams now have many ways to see—and prepare for—potential dangers.

DSCOVR Earth from space
Posted inNews

One-Pixel Views of Earth Reveal Seasonal Changes

by Katherine Kornei 9 January 201911 January 2019

By averaging satellite images of the Earth down to a single pixel, researchers trace how the planet’s mean color varies over time, results that inform observations of distant exoplanets.

Posted inEditors' Highlights

Advancing Satellite Ocean Color Observations

by S. B. Moran 27 March 2018

A new derived algorithm for particle backscattering and multi-year VIIRS climatology improves ocean color parameterization in highly turbid coastal and inland waters.

Sentinel-2A natural-color satellite image of the Sundarbans area in the Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta, captured on 18 March 2016.
Posted inOpinions

Monitoring Coastal Zone Changes from Space

by A. Cazenave, G. Le Cozannet, J. Benveniste, P. L. Woodworth and N. Champollion 2 November 2017

The resilience of coastal communities depends on an integrated, worldwide coastal monitoring effort. Satellite observations provide valuable data on global to local scales.

Posted inScience Updates

Putting Satellite Maps of Surface Water to Practical Use

by F. Hossain, A. Andral and M. Srinivasan 19 September 2017

2nd SWOT Application User Workshop: Engaging the User Community for Advancing Societal Applications of the Surface Water Ocean Topography (SWOT) Mission, Reston, Virginia, 5–6 April 2017

Giovanni time-averaged satellite map of the March aerosol optical thickness off the coast of western Africa from 2003 to 2016
Posted inScience Updates

Giovanni: The Bridge Between Data and Science

by Z. Liu and J. Acker 24 August 201711 January 2023

Using satellite remote sensing data sets can be a daunting task. Giovanni, a Web-based tool, facilitates access, visualization, and exploration for many of NASA’s Earth science data sets.

Representatives from NYC and Rio look at the 2012 high-water mark from Hurricane Sandy at New York’s Battery Park.
Posted inScience Updates

Cities Partner to Prepare for Natural Hazards and Climate Change

by M. M. Hurwitz, F. Mandarino and D. B. Kirschbaum 18 July 2017

NASA-Rio-UCCRN Workshop on Sea Level Rise, Urban Heat Islands, and Water Quality; New York, 14–16 November 2016

Researchers explore the links between climate change and ocean tides
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Can Ocean Tides Be Powerful Indicators of Climate Change?

by S. Witman 6 June 20179 February 2022

A new study simulates how ocean warming due to climate change will affect the electromagnetic signal emitted by ocean tides over the next century.

Posted inResearch Spotlights

Better Estimates of Clouds' Climate Effects Are on the Horizon

by Sarah Stanley 14 April 20173 February 2022

A recent update to an algorithm for processing satellite data could improve understanding of the variable climate effects of clouds composed of different amounts of ice and liquid.

3-D view of Bingham Canyon Mine, Utah, an example of a human-made topographic fingerprint on the landscape.
Posted inOpinions

Mapping the Topographic Fingerprints of Humanity Across Earth

by P. Tarolli, G. Sofia and E. Ellis 16 March 201729 September 2021

If increasingly globalized societies are to make better land management decisions, the geosciences must globally evaluate how humans are reshaping Earth's surface

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Features from AGU Journals

RESEARCH SPOTLIGHTS
JGR: Solid Earth
“New Tectonic Plate Model Could Improve Earthquake Risk Assessment”
By Morgan Rehnberg

EDITORS' HIGHLIGHTS
AGU Advances
“Eminently Complex – Climate Science and the 2021 Nobel Prize”
By Ana Barros

EDITORS' VOX
Perspectives of Earth and Space Scientists
“New Directions for Perspectives of Earth and Space Scientists”
By Michael Wysession


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