Join the excitement as NASA broadcasts the FIRST Robotics Kick-off event on Jan. 5, 2008 starting at 10 a.m. EST. View the event live on NASA TV.
The Atlantic Hurricane Season began early in 2007, and by mid-December it was still going.
Hundreds of NASA scientists contributed to the United Nations effort recognized with the Nobel Peace Prize earlier this month.
NASA has discovered that the chilling effect of dust was responsible for the difference in hurricane activity between 2005 and 2006.
With the help of NASA satellites, researchers are working to broaden daily forecasts to include predictions of air quality.
New findings from NASA's CloudSat and other spacecraft in NASA's "A-Train" constellation of five Earth observing satellites offer important insights into this year's record reduction of Arctic sea ice, global rainfall patterns and the effects of pollution on clouds.
Thanks to student interns and NASA satellites forecasters will be able to predict overall storm damage more accurately.
NASA researchers will present research findings at the 2007 Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
A study using NASA data indicates that smaller tropical storms do more to alleviate droughts than hurricanes do over the course of a season by bringing greater cumulative rainfall.
The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission has helped scientists re-write the book about profound parts of Earth’s water cycle.