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The Latest in NASA Science News

The latest news briefs from NASA science.

    Hammering Out a Way to Find Shelter on the Moon and Mars

    A person holds a sledgehammer while wearing an orange safety vest and standing in an arid landscape while other people look on.

    With several hundred blows of a 10-pound (4.5-kilogram) sledgehammer, researchers tested a method to find subsurface caves that could serve as safe underground habitats and research facilities on the Moon and Mars. The team, which includes NASA scientists, conducted their field experiments near Flagstaff, Arizona, and Tulelake, California, in locations that resemble the landscapes future […]

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    NASA Scientists Map Plant Productivity with Data from Ocean Satellite

    A map of North America changes colors showing how plant productivity moves further north as Northern Hemisphere winter progresses.

    NASA scientists have developed a new set of tools to monitor plant growth under various conditions throughout the growing season. The hope is that land managers could use these tools to detect sudden drops in plant productivity and to respond earlier to events like heat stress, droughts, and cold snaps. Monitoring the productivity, or how […]

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    US-German Water Satellites Show Continental Dry Spots Are Getting Drier

    A cow stands next to a dried pond.

    Several regions around the world are seeing marked declines in water availability, according to a paper published in the journal Science Advances on July 25. The study, partially funded by NASA, found that dry areas are increasing by about twice the size of California each year. Researchers identified the trend using data collected from 2002 […]

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    NASA-NOAA Satellites Find Smoke Complicates Wildfire Lightning Risk

    A white cloud as viewed from above rises over gray smoke streaming from fires in a mountainous region as seen from space

    Heat rising from wildfires can create clouds that produce extreme amounts of lightning, but this doesn’t necessarily increase the risk of secondary fires. The mixed blessings of lightning activity over wildfires are the subject of a study in JGR Atmospheres of data from the massive Sparks Lake fire in British Columbia in June 2021. Researchers […]

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    Data from NASA’s ICESat-2 Goes Beyond the Surface

    Landsat satellite image of the sands and seaweed in the Bahamas.

    Researchers have developed a new way to measure near-shore bathymetry using satellite observations alone. Soon after NASA’s ICESat-2 satellite launched into orbit in 2018 on a mission to measure the heights of Earth’s ice, forests, and land cover, scientists examined the data and found something unexpected. As the laser instrument aboard the Ice, Cloud, land, […]

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    Protecting Wetlands in Southeast Asia Could Reduce Area’s Carbon Emissions

    This image shows mangroves with giant roots in Southeast Asia.

    As much as half of the carbon dioxide emissions that result from deforestation and other land-use changes in Southeast Asia could be reduced by saving two kinds of wetlands: peatlands and mangroves, according to a study published in Nature Communications. Wetlands store three to five times more carbon than tropical dryland forests and they absorb […]

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    Tilting Toward Habitability

    Artist's Concept of Exoplanet Orbiting Fomalhaut

    Earth is literally inclined to be habitable. After running 93 simulations, NASA-funded researchers have gained a clearer understanding of the parameters that make the orbits of Earth-like planets suitable for land-based lifeforms to thrive. The length of our planet’s day, the tilt of its axis, and other orbital parameters ensure that the seasons, sunlight, and temperatures […]

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