GEOS Aerosols

  • Released Friday, August 8, 2025
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Visualization showcasing aerosols as modeled by NASA's Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) for the period from August 1 to September 14, 2024.

Aerosols are tiny solid or liquid particles suspended in the atmosphere that can travel vast distances, affecting air quality and visibility far from their original sources. This visualization is based on NASA's Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS) model, which provides realistic, high-resolution weather and aerosol data that enables customized environmental prediction and advances in AI research.

This version includes annotations and a color scale and is provided in 6480×3240 resolution (2:1 aspect ratio).

NASA uses satellites, ground measurements, and powerful computer models to track tiny particles floating in our air called aerosols. These small solid or liquid particles can travel thousands of miles, affecting the air we breathe and how far we can see, even far from where they originated.

This visualization shows how these particles moved through Earth's atmosphere from August 1-September 14, 2024. Different colors represent different types of aerosols: sea salt (blue), dust (pink/magenta), smoke from fires (orange/red), and sulfates from pollution and volcanoes (green).

The visualization highlights several atmopsheric phenomena:

Hurricanes and Typhoons: Hurricane Ernesto in the Atlantic Ocean pulls in dust from Africa, while Typhoons Shanshan and Ampil near Japan draw pollution from mainland Asia. The storms' powerful winds churn up ocean water, creating sea salt particles visible as blue spirals.

Saharan Dust Journey: Desert dust from the Sahara travels all the way across the Atlantic Ocean, creating hazy skies in the Caribbean and affecting air quality as far away as Texas and Florida during summer 2024.

Volcanic Plumes: Hawaii's Kilauea Volcano released a narrow stream of sulfate particles moving westward, while Italy's Mount Etna created similar streams over southern Europe.

Wildfire Smoke:

  • In southern Africa, seasonal agricultural burning created smoke that drifted over the Atlantic Ocean

  • South America faced record-breaking wildfires in 2024, creating a river-like flow of smoke particles that affected major Brazilian cities

  • Canada experienced its second-worst wildfire season on record, with smoke traveling as far as northern Europe

The swirling blue patterns over oceans show sea salt kicked up by strong winds.

This visualization helps us understand how our atmosphere connects distant parts of the world. What happens in one region—whether natural events or human activities—can affect weather patterns and air quality thousands of miles away. By tracking these movements, NASA helps communities prepare for changes in air quality and visibility while advancing our understanding of Earth's complex atmospheric system.

The visualization was developed using NASA’s Goddard Earth Observing System (GEOS), a complex modeling and data assimilation system that creates global analyses of the Earth System. GEOS integrates satellite observations, in situ measurements, and approximately one million weather observations collected hourly to inform its models. Through the GEOS Forward Processing (FP) product, the system generates both analyses and forecasts in near real-time. Images for this visualization were created by NASA’s Global Modeling and Assimilation Office (GMAO).

This webpage provides the content in multiple resolutions and aspect ratios.

Visualization content in 2:1 aspect ratio

No description available.

This frame set provides annotations with transparency for compositing purposes.

Colorbar

No description available.

Colorbar for the aerosols visualization.

Visualization content in 16:9 aspect ratio

Visualization showcasing aerosols by NASA's Goddard Earth Observing (GEOS) model in 16:9 aspect ratio. This version includes annotations and a colorbar is provided in multiple resolutions.

NASA's Hyperwall Display (5x3)

Visualization showcasing aerosols by NASA's Goddard Earth Observing (GEOS) model in 9600x3840 resolution.
This version is designed for NASA's 5x3 Hyperwall Display system.

Visualization showcasing aerosols by NASA's Goddard Earth Observing (GEOS) model. This version includes annotations of various events and is offered in 9600x3840 resolution, designed for NASA's 5x3 Hyperwall Display system.

Visualization showcasing aerosols by NASA's Goddard Earth Observing (GEOS) model. This version includes a colorbar, annotations of various events and is offered in 9600x3840 resolution, designed for NASA's 5x3 Hyperwall Display system.

Visualization content for Earth Information Center Hyperwall Displays (32:9 aspect ratio)

Visualization showcasing aerosols by NASA's Goddard Earth Observing (GEOS) model. This version includes a colorbar, annotations of various events and is offered in 7680x2160 resolution, designed for Earth's Information Center Hyperwall Display systems.

No description available.

Right circle display visual



Credits

NASA's Global Modeling Assimilation Office (GMAO) and NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio (SVS)


Datasets used

Note: While we identify the data sets used on this page, we do not store any further details, nor the data sets themselves on our site.


Citing this page

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.16782523


Release date

This page was originally published on Friday, August 8, 2025.
This page was last updated on Thursday, July 31, 2025 at 3:12 PM EDT.