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NASA's Earth Science Division focuses on understanding our planet through over 20 satellites and various research programs, aiming to address environmental challenges and improve life on Earth. The division investigates key science questions related to global changes and their causes, while developing the Earth System Observatory to provide critical data on climate change and natural hazards. Through collaboration and open data access, NASA seeks to enhance societal benefits and inspire future generations of explorers.
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NASA Earth
Science
For our research community
NASA is an exploration agency, and one of our missions is to know our home. We develop novel tools
and techniques for understanding how our planet works — for the benefit of humanity and for
insights we need to explore other moons and planets. NASA's Earth Science Division operates more
than 20 satellites in orbit, sponsors hundreds of research programs and studies, and funds
opportunities to put data to use for societal needs. We develop new ways to observe the oceans,
land cover, ice, atmosphere, and life, and we measure how changes in one drive changes in othersover the short and long term. While listening to and collaborating with industry leaders,
international partners, academic institutions, and other users of our data, we drive innovations and
deliver science to help inform decisions that benefit the nation and the world.
Learn more about how NASA Earth science helps Americans
respond to challenges.
NASA’s Earth Science Division (ESD) missions help us to understand our planet's interconnected
systems, from a global scale down to minute processes.
ESD delivers the technology, expertise, global observations, and applications that help us map the
myriad connections between our planet's vital processes and the climate effects of ongoing natural
and human-caused changes.
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NASA's Earth observing fleet as of 3.26.2
Using observations from satellites, instruments on the International Space Station, airplanes,
balloons, ships and on land, ESD researchers collect data about the science of our planet's
atmospheric motion and composition; land cover, land use and vegetation; ocean currents,temperatures and upper-ocean life; and ice on land and sea. These data sets, which cover even the
most remote areas of Earth, are freely and openly available to anyone.
ESD offers end-to-end development, launch, data collection, analysis, and application of its
missions, including those with partners in U.S. and international government, and the private sector.
ESD also sponsors research and extends science and technology education to learners of all ages,
inspiring the next generation of explorers.
Science Questions
NASA's Science Mission Directorate Strategic Plan reflects the agency's science agenda, as.
proscribed by the Executive and Legislative branches. Published every four years, the SMD plan is
designed to complement the agency's overall strategic plan and is informed by the most recent
Decadal Survey.
NASA‘s strategic objective for Earth science is to advance knowledge of Earth as a system in order
to meet the challenges of environmental change and to improve life on our planet.
The Earth Science Division (ESD) programs address this objective by asking the following key
science questions:
How is the global Earth system changing?
What causes these changes in the Earth system?
How will the Earth system change in the future?
+ How can Earth system science provide societal benefit?
These science questions translate into six focus areas to guide the Earth Science Division's selection
of investigations and other programmatic decisions:
+ Atmospheric Composition (AC) conducts research on Earth's atmosphere, including its
chemical and physical properties, Earth's energy budget, and air quality.
: Dynamics (WAD) researches the dynamics of the atmosphere
to improve our understanding of the fundamental processes that drive weather.
+ Climate Variability and Change (CVC) measures and models Earth's dynamic systems and
how they change over time.+ Water and Energy Cycle (WEC) supports focused and crosscutting research to improve
our understanding of the global water cycle.
sosystems (CCE) detects, explains, and predicts changes in Earth's
* Carbon Cycle a
ecosystems, biogeochemical cycles, biodiversity, and land cover.
(ESI) supports research and analysis of solid-Earth processes
from crust to core.
NASA Earth System
Observatory
NASA is developing the Earth System Observatory, the core of which is five satellite missions
providing critical data on climate change, severe weather and other natural hazards, wildfires, and
global food production.
These observations will address the most pressing questions about our changing planet, as
identified in the 2017 Earth Science Decadal Survey by the National Academies of Science,
Engineering, and Medicine. The core of the Observatory will focus on five areas: Aerosols; Cloud,
Convection, and Precipitation; Mass Change; Surface Biology and Geology; and Surface
Deformation and Change. Consistent with the Academies’ recommendations, NASA will augment
the core with competitively selected Earth Explorer missions, to infuse innovation and deliver
additional high-priority observations.Ve) ee CLOUDS, CONVECTION
OBSERVATORY AND PRECIPITATION
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Each of the missions will deliver important environmental measurements. Taken together, as a single
Observatory, NASA will have a holistic, 3D view of Earth to better understand how our planet's
complex systems work together and improve our capability to predict how our climate may change.
NASA's Open Source Science strategy is the key to bringing the data from these missions together
into a single observatory to help understand the earth as a system and accelerate our ability to use
this understanding. These observations will better inform decision-makers on how our planet is
changing, with greater precision on previously unimaginable scales -from entire continents down to
individual trees, from atmosphere to bedrock.
Learn more about NASA's Earth System Observatory.
Learn more
About ESD °°
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