Skip all navigation and jump to content Jump to site navigation Jump to section navigation.
NASA Logo - Goddard Space Flight Center + Visit NASA.gov
HOME PROJECTS RESOURCES SEARCH MAP

+ Advanced Search
Home
Home
View Most Recently Released Imagery
View Gallery of Imagery: A topical collection of SVS Imagery
Search Imagery by the keywords assigned to it
Search Imagery by the instruments that supplied data for a visualization product
Search Imagery by the series of visualizations that have been produced
Search Imagery by the scientist providing the data used in a visualization product
Search Imagery by the animator that created the product
Search Imagery by the identification number assigned to the visualization product
See other search options
Learn about the SVS Image Server
  + About the Server
  + Animation List
  + How to Use the Server


  + RSS Feeds
  + Podcasts


  + Opportunities
blank image

Rich Melnick



Movie   ID   Roles   Title
We know climate change can affect us, but does climate change alter something as vast, deep and mysterious as our oceans? For years, scientists have studied the world's oceans by sending out ships and divers, deploying data-gathering buoys, and by taking aerial measurements from planes. But one of the better ways to understand oceans is to gain an even broader perspective - the view from space. NASA's Earth observing satellites do more than just take pictures of our planet. High-tech sensors gather data, including ocean surface temperature, surface winds, sea level, circulation, and even marine life. Information the satellites obtain help us understand the complex interactions driving the world's oceans today - and gain valuable insight into how the impacts of climate change on oceans might affect us on dry land.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10502 Editor
  Climate Change and the Global Ocean
Meet engineers who assembled built, integrated and tested the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO).<p><p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10471 Support
  SDO Engineers Create What Never Was
SDO is Moving On Out   10476 Support
  G2009-080 SDO Moves Out
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) is the first mission in NASA's planned return to the moon. LRO is an unmanned mission to create the comprehensive atlas of the moon's features and resources necessary to design all future lunar exploration efforts. LRO focuses on the selection of safe landing sites, identification of lunar resources and the study of how lunar radiation will affect humans.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10438 Editor
Producer
  LRO: Mapping Our Future
SOHO/TRACE Intro with bonus Sun Shots segment.<p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='/vis/a010000/a010400/a010421/SOHOtraceTranscript.htm'>here</a>.   10421 Editor
Producer
  SOHO/TRACE Intro
In commemoration of the end of the International Polar Year, Tom Wagner, NASA Cryosphere Program Scientist, appeared on television stations around the country on April 6, 2009. This video highlights his answers to questions about the IPY, climate change, and new data on the extent and thickness of sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='/vis/a010000/a010400/a010419/2009_Sea_Ice_Findings_Cap_IPY_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10419 Editor
  New Sea Ice Findings Cap Year of Focus on Poles
Designed exclusively for playback on spherical projections surfaces, FROZEN introduces mainstream audiences to the cryosphere--places on Earth where the temperatures don't rise above water's freezing point. The following trailer showcases some of the visual themes contained in the movie and points to the film's main website.<p><p>This film has been prepared exclusively for playback on spherical projections systems. It will not appear in its proper format on a traditional computer or television screen. If you are interested in dowloading the complete final movie file for spherical playback, please visit : <p><a href=   10403 Support
  FROZEN: A Spherical Movie About the Cryosphere
NASA's THEMIS mission has overturned a longstanding belief about the interaction between solar particles and Earth's protective magnetic field. This new discovery could help scientists predict when the solar storms that can disrupt power grids, satellites and even GPS signals, could be especially severe.<p>For more information: www.nasa.gov/themis<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='/vis/a010000/a010300/a010356/THEMIS_script_12-11.htm'>here</a>.   10356 Editor
  THEMIS Discovers Biggest Breach of Earth's Magnetosphere
Are We Waking Sleeping Giants?<p>Dr. Waleed Abdalait's lecture on Climate Change and Polar Ice.<p><p><p><p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='/vis/a010000/a010300/a010371/script_799_01.html'>here</a>.   10371 Editor
Producer
Videographer
  Climate Change and Polar Ice
This short web video features dynamic animations, science data visualizations, and excerpts with a NASA oceanographer to explore the fascinating phenomenon of ocean dead zones.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='/vis/a010000/a010300/a010331/In_the_Zone_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10331 Editor
  In The Zone
This is an excerpt of the STS-125 Preflight Science Briefing recorded at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center on September 15, 2008.<p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='/vis/a010000/a010200/a010259/script_742_00.html'>here</a>.   10259 Editor
Producer
  Vision. Hope. Triumph.
This video shows how we may be having a greater impact on the weather than we ever knew.   10289 Editor
  Rain Rain Go Away Come Again on a Work Day?
<b>Eclipse Web Short:</b> Learn about the August 2008 total solar eclipse and hear from some of NASA's eclipse experts as they answer some frequently asked eclipse questions.   10287 Editor
Producer
  Get Ready for the August 1, 2008 Total Solar Eclipse
Electromagnetic Spectrum   10282 Editor
Producer
  Electromagnetic Spectrum
The Deputy Project Manager for the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) program, Cathy Peddie, expresses her personal and professional thoughts on the upcoming LRO mission.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10257 Editor
Producer
  Return with LRO
This animation begins with a wide shot of the United States and zooms down to the Eastern seaboard of the United States while cycling through nearly ten years of SeaWiFS biosphere data.   3526 Editor
  Biosphere Data Over United States Eastern Seaboard (Land Masked)
Celebrating the launch and science of NASA's Gamma-Ray Large Area Space Telescope.   10251 Editor
Producer
  GLAST Prelude, for Brass Quintet, Op.12
Gamma Ray Burst   10245 Editor
  Gamma Ray Burst
Dug out of the NASA archives is this history of Venus exploration, a history that ended over a decade ago and leaves many questions still today.   10197 Editor
  Return to Venus
With so many questions and so few answers, is a U.S. Venus mission overdue?   10192 Editor
Producer
  Venus: Long Time, No See
Discover Earth, Discover Space, Discover Excellence... Discovery in Maryland.  Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.   10187 Editor
Producer
  GSFC Day: From Greenbelt to Galaxies
The last mission to Hubble, Servicing Mission 4 movie-trailer-like video.

<p>For complete transcript, click <a href='/vis/a010000/a010200/a010244/script_415_02.html'>here</a>.   10244 Editor
  Hubble Servicing Mission Movie Trailer 1
This edited music video shows the launch and deploy of GLAST, and the spacecraft in orbit. It ends with the website for GLAST: www.nasa.gov/glast   10172 Editor
Producer
  GLAST Promo Video
Final animation composite showing both land-based photographs of seasonal vegetation change alongside satellite data of NDVI over the United States.  The animation first starts with photographs of Tamarisk at the Grand Staircase Escalante National Monument in Utah.  These photos then cycle through time showing the changing seasons.  They then pull away to reveal NDVI data over the western U.S.  The NDVI data continues to cycle through the seasons in synchronization with the photos.  Finally, the cycling NDVI data is combined with land cover classification data to create the Tamarisk suitability map.   3332 Editor
  Deriving the Tamarisk Suitability Map: The Complete Story
Newly updated print resolution image showing the retreat of Jakobshavns calving front from 2001 to 2004.   3076 Editor
  Jakobshavn Glacier Calving Front Recession Updated (2001-2004)


Back to Top

USA.gov logo - the U.S. Government's official Web portal. + Privacy Policy and Important Notices
+ Reproduction Guidelines
NASA NASA Official:
SVS Contact:
Curator: