Researchers have conducted the first global analysis of the health and productivity of ocean plants, as revealed by a unique signal detected by a NASA satellite.
The U.S. soybean crop is suffering nearly $2 billion in damage a year due to rising surface ozone concentrations, a NASA-led study has concluded.
NASA will hold a media teleconference on Thursday, May 28, at 1 p.m. EDT, to present the first-ever global views of the health of marine plant life.
NASA researchers are using satellite data to estimate soil moisture, improving global forecasts of how well the world's crops will grow during shortages.
Earth scientists are reaping huge benefits from research performed on NASA's advanced supercomputers.
NASA has awarded $6.4 million in grants to institutions of higher education and not-for-profit education organizations nationwide to enhance learning through the use of NASA's Earth science resources.
Twenty years ago NASA embarked on a revolutionary new mission for its Earth science program: to study our home planet from space as an inter-related whole, rather than as individual parts.
New research is making it easier to accurately track snowmelt -- water from snowpacks that melt in spring -- in mountainous regions.
Hot weather just before the Santa Barbara, Calif., wildfire quickly dried up soil moisture from rain one day prior, contributing to the fire danger.
Researchers from NASA Langley's Science Directorate jumped into action recently, studying wildfire smoke with EPA partners.
Researchers have developed a new way to measure Earth’s aurora and are learning more about geomagnetic disturbances.