Press releases from the NASA centers and from NASA researchers. Did Dust Bust the 2006 Hurricane Season Forecasts? March 28 A recent NASA study suggests that tiny dust particles may have foiled forecasts that the 2006 hurricane season would be another active one. More Reindeer and Snowflakes: NASA Helps During International Polar Year March 28 Two things that come to mind during wintertime are snowflakes and reindeer, and NASA is providing technology to help study both in various ways during a kick off of the International Polar Year in Norway. More Golden State Heating Up, New NASA/University Study Finds March 28 Average temperatures in California rose nearly two degrees Fahrenheit during the second half of the 20th century, with urban areas blazing the way to warmer conditions, according to a new study. More Gravity Measurements Help Melt Ice Mysteries March 23 Recent NASA satellite measurements show that Greenland's ice cap is melting much faster than expected. More 'Cool' Science: JPL Observes International Polar Year March 21 Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory have joined their colleagues from other NASA centers, agencies, and universities in a worldwide campaign to better understand the polar regions of Earth. More NASA Finds Sun-Climate Connection in Old Nile Records March 19 Scientists have found a convincing link between long-term solar and climate variability in directly measured ancient water level records of the Nile. More Clearing the Air: NASA and the EPA Work to Understand the Quality of the Air We Breathe March 19 NASA and the EPA recently completed a short but intense field campaign to study air quality in the San Joaquin Valley in central California. More Global 'Sunscreen' Has Likely Thinned, Report NASA Scientists March 15 A new NASA study has found that an important counter-balance to the warming of our planet by greenhouse gases – sunlight blocked by dust, pollution and other aerosol particles – appears to have lost ground. More NASA Studies How Airborne Particles Affect Climate Change March 14 A recent NASA study links natural and human-made aerosol particles to how much Earth warms or cools. More NASA Studies True Colors of Evergreen Rainforests March 12 NASA satellites reveal that Amazon forests are neither evergreen nor dependent on constant rain, and are capable of manufacturing their seasons. More Spacecraft to Study Clouds at Edge of Space Arrives at Vandenberg March 12 NASA spacecraft designed to study polar mesospheric clouds located at the edge of space will launch soon. More Satellite Offers a Room With the Best View of Antarctica March 7 Researchers have woven together more than a thousand images from the Landsat 7 satellite to create the most detailed high-resolution map ever produced of Antarctica. More NASA's Advanced Technology Peers Deep Inside Hurricanes March 6 Determined to understand why some storms grow into hurricanes while others fizzle, NASA scientists recently looked deep into thunderstorms off the African coast using satellites and airplanes. More Antarctic Ice Sheet's Hidden Lakes Speed Ice Flow Into Ocean, May Disrupt Climate March 5 Researchers have unearthed how water from a vast subglacial system contributes to the formation of ice streams and plays a crucial role in transporting ice from the remote interior of Antarctica toward the surrounding ocean. More Airborne Science in the Classroom: The Next-Best Thing to Being There March 5 An innovative aircraft tool took center stage in a recent research mission to better understand hurricanes. More NASA Detects Trends in Rainfall Traits from Drizzles to Downpours March 2 Using a new technique NASA scientists confirm that extremely heavy rainfall in the tropics is indeed on the rise. More Pacific Shows Signs of Morphing From Warm El Nino to Cool La Nina March 2 New data from NASA satellites show that the tropical Pacific Ocean has transitioned from a warm (El Niño) to a cool (La Niña) condition during the prior two months. More NASA Data Link Indonesian Wildfire Flare-Up to Recent El Nino March 1 Scientists using NASA data have linked the recent El Nino to the greatest rise in wildfire activity in Indonesia since the record-breaking 1997-98 El Nino. More Back to: News |