Welcome to the Planetary Geodynamics Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. On January 24, 2005, as part of the restructuring that created a unified
Sciences and Exploration Directorate ,
we changed our name and became part of the
Solar System Exploration
Division .
- Herb Frey, Laboratory Chief
The mission of the Planetary Geodynamics Laboratory is to conduct research into the structure, dynamics and evolution of the solid Earth and planets, using in situ and remote sensing data, to better understand:
Major elements include Geomagnetism, Crustal Deformation, Topography and Surface Change, Orbital-Rotational-Climate Interaction, Planetary Geology and Geophysics.
The research activities of the Planetary Geodynamics Laboratory comprise a broadly based effort, centered on measuring, modeling, and interpreting the configuration and motion of the crust, mantle, and core of the Earth. Similar efforts are also directed toward understanding the Moon, Mars, and Venus. Relevant data types include regional-to-global scale patterns of stress, strain, seismicity, gravity, topography, magnetics, and temporal variations in Earth rotation. Processes under intensive study include orbital evolution, post-glacial rebound, rotational dynamics, faulting, tectonism, volcanism, mantle convection, core magnetohydrodynamics, erosion and impact crater formation.