NASA is partnering with Odyssey of the Mind to develop an Earth science problem for the 2001-2002 program year.
The NASA QuikTOMS ozone monitoring satellite launched earlier today was lost due to the failure of the commercial launch vehicle purchased by the Agency to deliver the payload into orbit.
A new computer model of the atmosphere can now actually pinpoint where global dust events come from, and can project where they're going.
Scientists have been mystified by observations that when sea ice on one side of the South Pole recedes, it advances farther out on the other side.
NASA researchers confirm a theory that globe-encircling bands of atmospheric energy play a role in controlling ozone losses in the stratosphere.
New satellite images show the depleted region of ozone known as the ozone "hole."
NASA soon will launch its latest ozone-monitoring instrument, which will allow scientists to continue their long-term measurements of global ozone levels.
A remotely piloted aircraft will demonstrate how to provide life-saving images of wildfires to firefighters in near real-time via the Internet on Thursday, Sept. 6.
NASA satellite data suggest that for more than two decades there's been a gradual greening of the northern latitudes of Earth.