• NASA Earth Science instruments on the International Space Station.
    ID: 30280 Hyperwall Visual

    NASA Science Facilities on the International Space Station

    October 21, 2013

    NASA Earth Science missions on the International Space Station || 30280 || NASA Science Facilities on the International Space Station || The International Space Station offers a unique vantage point for observing the Earth's ecosystems with hands-on and automated equipment. These options enable astronauts to observe and explain what they witness in real time. Station crews can observe and collect camera images of events as they unfold and may also provide input to ground personnel programming the station's automated Earth-sensing systems. This flexibility is an advantage over sensors on unmanned spacecraft, especially when unexpected natural events such as volcanic eruptions and earthquakes occur. A wide variety of Earth-observation payloads can be attached to the exposed facilities on the station's exterior; already, several instruments have been proposed by researchers from the partner countries. The station contributes to humanity by collecting data on the global climate, environmental change and natural hazards using its unique complement of crew-operated and automated Earth-observation payloads. || NASA Earth Science instruments on the International Space Station. || ISS-Chart-05052026a-1080p.png (1920x1080) [1.5 MB] || ISS-Chart-05052026a.png (3840x2160) [4.0 MB] || For More Information || See science.nasa.gov || Earth || Hyperwall || ISS || Mark Malanoski (Global Science and Technology, Inc.) as Project support || Heather Hanson (Global Science and Technology, Inc.) as Writer || Amy Moran (Global Science and Technology, Inc.) as Technical support ||

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  • The Planetary Fleet
    ID: 30835 Hyperwall Visual

    NASA's Planetary Fleets, Including Mars, Venus, Discovery Missions, and Small Body Missions

    August 30, 2018

    The Planetary Fleet || planetary_fleet_spiral_04017024_print.jpg (1024x576) [208.9 KB] || planetary_fleet_spiral_04017024.png (3840x2160) [9.8 MB] || planetary_fleet_spiral_04017024_searchweb.png (320x180) [89.8 KB] || planetary_fleet_spiral_04017024_web.png (320x180) [89.8 KB] || planetary_fleet_spiral_04017024_thm.png (80x40) [6.5 KB] || nasas-planetary-fleet.hwshow [307 bytes] || || 30835 || NASA's Planetary Fleets, Including Mars, Venus, Discovery Missions, and Small Body Missions || The Planetary Fleet || planetary-fleet-04082026d-1080p.png (1920x1080) [2.7 MB] || planetary-fleet-04082026d.png (3840x2160) [9.7 MB] || nasas-planetary-fleet.hwshow [307 bytes] || Planetary science is a grand human enterprise that seeks to understand the history of our solar system and the distribution of life within it. Planetary science missions inform us about our neighborhood and our own origin and evolution; they are necessary precursors to the expansion of humanity beyond Earth. Through five decades of planetary exploration, NASA has developed the capac­ity to explore all of the objects in our solar system. Future missions will bring back samples from some of these desti­nations, allowing iterative detailed study and analysis back on Earth. In the future, humans will return to the Moon, go to asteroids, Mars, and ultimately other solar system bodies to explore them, but only after they have been explored and understood using robotic missions. || Planets & Moons || Curiosity || Dawn || Europa Clipper || ExoMars || Fleet || Heliophysics || Hyperwall || Juno || Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter || Mars Odyssey || MAVEN || New Horizons || OSIRIS-REx || Dawn || ExoMars Rover || InSight || Juno || Mars Express || Mars Odyssey || MAVEN: Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN || NEOWISE || New Horizons || OSIRIS-REX || Amy Moran (Global Science and Technology, Inc.) as Technical support || Jenny Mottar (Digital Management, Inc.) as Graphic designer ||

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  • The current operational and future science fleet.
    ID: 31162 Hyperwall Visual

    Operating and Future Science fleet

    August 30, 2021

    The current operational and future science fleet. || SMD_MASTER_FLEET_07_29_2024-hw_tweaks_print.jpg (1024x575) [267.6 KB] || SMD_MASTER_FLEET_07_29_2024-hw_tweaks.png (2667x1500) [5.9 MB] || SMD_MASTER_FLEET_07_29_2024-hw_tweaks_searchweb.png (320x180) [191.9 KB] || SMD_MASTER_FLEET_07_29_2024-hw_tweaks_thm.png (80x40) [98.2 KB] || || 31162 || Operating and Future Science fleet || The current operational and future science fleet. || SMD_FLEET_OPERATING_CROSS-DIRECTORATE_DEC_2025_1080p.jpg (1920x1080) [2.1 MB] || SMD_FLEET_OPERATING_CROSS-DIRECTORATE_DEC_2025_PRINT.jpg (4001x2250) [6.2 MB] || NASA Science missions circle the Earth, the Sun, the Moon, Mars, and many other destinations within our Solar System, including spacecraft that look out even further into our universe. The Science Fleet depicts the scope of NASA’s activity and how our missions have permeated throughout the solar system. || NASA's Science fleet by the numbers || Science_by_the_Numbers_print.jpg (1024x576) [128.5 KB] || Science_by_the_Numbers.png (3840x2160) [1.3 MB] || operating-and-future-science-fleet-1.hwshow [304 bytes] || Earth || Planets & Moons || Sun || Universe || Fleet || Hyperwall || Missions || Science Mission Directorate || Jenny Mottar (Digital Management, Inc.) as Designer || Amy Moran (Global Science and Technology, Inc.) as Technical support ||

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  • NASA Image of the Day: "Spacemobile". Three men in suits pictured with Lewis Research Center "spacemobile" – a blue van with the words "SPACE Mobile" and "National Aeronautics and Space Administration" written on the side. This is a historic photo from NASA's image archives.
    ID: 31364 Hyperwall Visual

    Images of the Day

    February 8, 2026

    From Earth's shifting surface to the furthest reaches of our universe — this image collection is updated daily with new photos and captions from NASA's most recent heliophysics, Earth science, planetary and astrophysics discoveries. || 31364 || Images of the Day || From Earth's shifting surface to the farthest reaches of our universe — this image collection is updated daily with new photos and captions from NASA's most recent heliophysics, Earth science, planetary, and astrophysics discoveries. || NASA Image of the Day || NASA Image of the Day. Read today's caption here. || NASA's Image of the Day highlights groundbreaking discoveries and historic moments. Every day, a new image and caption are published. See the full gallery here. || image_of_the_day_720p.jpg (1280x720) [1.4 MB] || image_of_the_day.jpg (3840x2160) [9.3 MB] || Earth Observatory Image of the Day || Earth Observatory Image of the Day. Read today's caption here. If today's caption says "video of the day" then today's image is actually a video and will not appear in the image thumbnail above. Donwload the latest video here. || NASA's Earth Observatory brings you the Earth, every day: sharing images, stories, and discoveries about the environment, Earth systems, and climate that emerge from NASA research, including its satellite missions, in-the-field research, and models. See the full gallery here. || earth-iotd_720p.jpg (1280x720) [551.5 KB] || earth-iotd.jpg (3840x2160) [4.5 MB] || Astronomy Picture of the Day || Astronomy Picture of the Day. Read today's caption here. || Discover the cosmos! Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer. || astro_image_of_the_day.jpg (960x960) [119.3 KB] || astro_image_of_the_day_720p.jpg (720x720) [79.3 KB] || NASA History Image of the Day || NASA History Image of the Day. Read today's caption here. || NASA's mission is to pioneer the future in space exploration, scientific discovery and aeronautics research. To do that, thousands of people have been working around the world—and off of it—for 50 years. This image is updated every day to highlight notable people, achievements, and discoveries from the agency's storied past. All photographs on the NASAcommons Flickr account originate from the compilation of photos from The NASA Image and Video Library and other archived sources. View the full gallery to learn more. || history-iotd_720p.jpg (1280x720) [161.7 KB] || history-iotd.jpg (3840x2160) [1.0 MB] || Nathan Marder (Global Science and Technology, Inc.) as Visualizer ||

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  • Master VersionHorizontal version. This is for use on any YouTube or non-YouTube platform where you want to display the video horizontally.
    ID: 14912 Produced Video

    The Weirdest Worlds Hubble Has Seen

    May 8, 2026

    Over 6,000 worlds and counting! NASA recently reached an incredible milestone in the search for planets beyond our solar system: more than six thousand confirmed exoplanets. From blazing hot Jupiters to mysterious super-Earths and puffy gas giants, each new discovery expands our view of the galaxy and deepens our oldest questions.When the Hubble Space Telescope launched in 1990, not a single exoplanet was known. Yet Hubble’s precision and ultraviolet vision helped pioneer this field, revealing the atmospheres of distant worlds, tracing escaping gases, and uncovering exotic planets unlike anything in our solar system. Its studies have shown planets that are football-shaped, evaporating into space, or as dark as fresh asphalt, each one a testament to nature’s imagination.Today, Hubble continues to team up with NASA’s new generation of observatories like Webb, TESS, and the upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope to explore these alien worlds in ever greater detail. Together, they’re unraveling what these planets are made of, how they evolve, and whether some might harbor life. As we celebrate 6,000 confirmed exoplanets, we look ahead to the next 6,000 and to the discoveries still waiting beyond our cosmic horizon.For more information, visit science.nasa.gov/mission/hubbleCredit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Paul Morris: Lead ProducerVideo Credits:Artist’s Impression of WASP-121bNASA, ESA, and J. Olmsted (STScI)Music Credit:"Winds" by Frederik Helmut Wiedmann [GMR] via Thousand Notes Music [GMR] and Universal Production Music || || 14912 || The Weirdest Worlds Hubble Has Seen || Over 6,000 worlds and counting! NASA recently reached an incredible milestone in the search for planets beyond our solar system: more than six thousand confirmed exoplanets. From blazing hot Jupiters to mysterious super-Earths and puffy gas giants, each new discovery expands our view of the galaxy and deepens our oldest questions.When the Hubble Space Telescope launched in 1990, not a single exoplanet was known. Yet Hubble’s precision and ultraviolet vision helped pioneer this field, revealing the atmospheres of distant worlds, tracing escaping gases, and uncovering exotic planets unlike anything in our solar system. Its studies have shown planets that are football-shaped, evaporating into space, or as dark as fresh asphalt, each one a testament to nature’s imagination.Today, Hubble continues to team up with NASA’s new generation of observatories like Webb, TESS, and the upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope to explore these alien worlds in ever greater detail. Together, they’re unraveling what these planets are made of, how they evolve, and whether some might harbor life. As we celebrate 6,000 confirmed exoplanets, we look ahead to the next 6,000 and to the discoveries still waiting beyond our cosmic horizon.For more information, visit science.nasa.gov/mission/hubbleCredit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Paul Morris: Lead ProducerVideo Credits:Artist’s Impression of WASP-121bNASA, ESA, and J. Olmsted (STScI)Music Credit:"Winds" by Frederik Helmut Wiedmann [GMR] via Thousand Notes Music [GMR] and Universal Production Music || Master VersionHorizontal version. This is for use on any YouTube or non-YouTube platform where you want to display the video horizontally. || 14912_EXOPLANET_WIDE_PRINT.jpg (1920x1080) [763.5 KB] || 14912_EXOPLANET_WIDE_THUMB.jpg (1920x1080) [763.5 KB] || 14912_EXOPLANET_WIDE_SEARCH.jpg (320x180) [42.6 KB] || 14912_EXOPLANET_WIDE_MP4.mp4 (1920x1080) [598.1 MB] || 14912_EXOPLANET_WIDE_CAP.en_US.srt [7.0 KB] || 14912_EXOPLANET_WIDE_CAP.en_US.vtt [6.6 KB] || Vertical VersionThis vertical version of the episode is for IGTV or Snapchat. The IGTV episode can be pulled into Instagram Stories and the regular Instagram feed. || 14912_EXOPLANET_VERT_THUMB.jpg (1080x1920) [439.1 KB] || 14912_EXOPLANET_VERT_MP4.mp4 (1080x1920) [598.5 MB] || 14912_EXOPLANET_VERT_CAP.en_US.srt [6.4 KB] || Universe || Exoplanet || HST || Hubble Space Telescope || Paul Morris (eMITS) as Producer || Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET Systems, Inc.) as Technical support ||

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  • A map of the Moon's northwest quadrant during Third Quarter showing the location of Carroll crater.
    ID: 5646 Visualization

    How to See the Proposed Carroll Crater

    May 8, 2026

    Carroll is a lunar crater provisionally named by the Artemis II crew in honor of Commander Reid Wiseman's late wife Carroll Taylor Wiseman. It can be seen from Earth in backyard telescopes if you know where and when to look. Two maps show its location near the western limb of the Moon's near side. || 5646 || How to See the Proposed Carroll Crater || Carroll is a lunar crater provisionally named by the Artemis II crew in honor of Commander Reid Wiseman's late wife Carroll Taylor Wiseman. (The name is in the process of being submitted to the International Astronomical Union, the entity responsible for naming planetary features.) It can be seen from Earth in backyard telescopes if you know where and when to look. Two maps on this page show its location near the western limb of the Moon's near side, and a table lists the dates of especially favorable librations.Carroll is located at 18.633°N, 86.533°W. Although small (6 kilometers or 4 miles wide), it is relatively young and surrounded by bright ejecta that make it easier to find. It is in sunlight from Full Moon through the thin waning crescent just before New Moon, but it may be best seen in the early morning hours beginning at the Third Quarter phase, to take advantage of diurnal libration. At Third Quarter, the Sun is high over Carroll's neighborhood, so finding it relies on albedo features rather than shadows. Crater hop starting at Grimaldi, a prominent dark patch near the equator and just off the western edge of Oceanus Procellarum, and move north through Riccioli, Hedin, and Glushko, all of which have easily recognizeable features. || A map of the Moon's northwest quadrant during Third Quarter showing the location of Carroll crater. || carroll_high_sun.jpg (1200x900) [174.0 KB] || carroll_high_sun.tif (2048x1536) [3.0 MB] || A few days before New Moon, long shadows in Carroll's neighborhood make nearby craters easier to identify. Look for the equal-size pair of craters Cardanus and Krafft and take a short hop northwest to the nearby bright patch of ejecta. || A map of the Moon's northwest quadrant during the waning crescent phase showing the location of Carroll crater. || carroll_low_sun.jpg (1200x900) [138.2 KB] || carroll_low_sun.tif (2048x1536) [2.8 MB] || Favorable Libration Dates || Because Carroll is so close to the western limb of the Moon, its visibility depends crucially on lunar libration in both longitude and latitude. The following table lists the dates of the most favorable libration conditions through the end of 2029. If the Moon isn't above your horizon at the listed times, the libration will still be favorable up to a day before or afterward.| Date | Libration | View Angle | Sun Angle || :--- | :---: | ---: | ---: || 10 May 2026 16:00 UT | 0.796°N 7.405°W | 79.46° | 26.1° || 07 Jun 2026 18:00 UT | 0.648°S 7.514°W | 79.83° | 17.6° || 05 Jul 2026 11:00 UT | 1.567°S 6.789°W | 80.82° | 25.3° || 01 Aug 2026 09:00 UT | 1.246°S 5.433°W | 81.99° | 51.8° || 27 Aug 2026 21:00 UT | 0.118°S 4.458°W | 82.54° | 85.9° || 05 Apr 2027 06:00 UT | 3.830°S 5.129°W | 83.14° | 77.7° || 02 May 2027 22:00 UT | 4.341°S 5.880°W | 82.60° | 56.5° || 31 May 2027 00:00 UT | 5.283°S 6.836°W | 82.02° | 41.0° || 28 Jun 2027 07:00 UT | 6.198°S 7.488°W | 81.73° | 29.2° || 26 Jul 2027 18:00 UT | 6.772°S 7.524°W | 81.89° | 21.7° || 24 Aug 2027 06:00 UT | 6.717°S 6.789°W | 82.56° | 19.4° || 21 Sep 2027 06:00 UT | 6.261°S 5.480°W | 83.63° | 27.1° || 16 Oct 2027 09:00 UT | 6.534°S 4.717°W | 84.43° | 73.7° || 21 Jun 2028 15:00 UT | 4.162°S 5.226°W | 83.15° | 84.1° || 19 Jul 2028 09:00 UT | 3.693°S 6.135°W | 82.14° | 64.7° || 16 Aug 2028 15:00 UT | 2.373°S 6.802°W | 81.07° | 51.3° || 14 Sep 2028 00:00 UT | 0.601°S 6.951°W | 80.34° | 39.6° || 12 Oct 2028 08:00 UT | 1.288°N 6.361°W | 80.28° | 28.4° || 09 Nov 2028 08:00 UT | 2.704°N 5.100°W | 81.02° | 20.2° || 06 Dec 2028 08:00 UT | 2.583°N 3.944°W | 82.15° | 35.6° || 01 Jan 2029 06:00 UT | 0.450°N 4.527°W | 82.29° | 75.9° || 09 Aug 2029 00:00 UT | 3.219°N 5.422°W | 80.55° | 85.5° || 05 Sep 2029 13:00 UT | 3.533°N 6.485°W | 79.45° | 63.3° || 03 Oct 2029 11:00 UT | 4.402°N 7.357°W | 78.35° | 45.7° || 31 Oct 2029 13:00 UT | 5.411°N 7.574°W | 77.82° | 30.8° || 28 Nov 2029 12:00 UT | 6.126°N 6.937°W | 78.21° | 19.8° || 25 Dec 2029 23:00 UT | 6.308°N 5.695°W | 79.32° | 28.5° | || Planets & Moons || Artemis Program (Human Spaceflight — Moon to Mars) (Artemis) || DEM (Digital Elevation Map) [LRO: LOLA] || LROC WAC Color Mosaic (Natural Color Hapke Normalized WAC Mosaic) [Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter: LRO Camera] || DE421 (JPL DE421) || Ernie Wright (USRA) as Visualizer ||

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  • The video image is a still image of the Moon, faded to gray and filling most of the screen. Black, blue, and red text reads "Cosmic Echoes Audio Activation" next to the NASA meatball logo.
    ID: 14983 Produced Video

    “Cosmic Echoes” Audio Activation

    May 8, 2026

    The experience guides listeners through a narrative journey across space exploration and science. || 14983 || “Cosmic Echoes” Audio Activation || The experience guides listeners through a narrative journey across space exploration and science, including:Historic milestones such as the radio “beeps” from Sputnik 1 and audio from the Apollo 11 mission.Natural electromagnetic waves in Earth’s magnetosphere and similar plasma waves detected near Jupiter.Astrophysics sonification using multi-wavelength data from NASA observatories including Chandra X-ray Observatory, Hubble Space Telescope, and Spitzer Space Telescope to “hear” the center of our galaxy.Earth science applications, including agricultural data from the Landsat program translated into musical patterns representing crop acreage.Planetary exploration sounds, such as wind and rover activity captured by Perseverance rover and flight audio from the Ingenuity helicopter on Mars.A concluding moment highlighting the touchdown signal from the Philae lander during the Rosetta mission. || SoundsofSpace.mp3 [11.2 MB] || Cosmic Echoes Audio Activation || CosmicEchoes.mp4 (1920x1080) [174.8 MB] || SoundsofSpace.mp3 [11.2 MB] || CosmicEchoes.srt [10.5 KB] || CosmicEchoes0.jpg (1920x1080) [594.9 KB] || Earth || Planets & Moons || Sun || Universe || Apollo Missions || Audio Stories || Jupiter || Landsat || Perseverance Mars Rover || Podcast || Narrated Movies || Erin Roberts (NASA/GSFC) as Producer || Jacob Pinter (eMITS) as Editor || Alexa Halford (NASA/GSFC) as Narrator || Alexa Halford (NASA/GSFC) as Scientist || Kathryn Mersmann (NASA/GSFC) as Technical support || Kathryn Mersmann (NASA/GSFC) as Accessibility ||

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  • Since its launch in 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope has changed our fundamental understanding of the universe.  Hubble’s unique design, allowing it to be repaired and upgraded with advanced technology by astronauts, has made it one of NASA’s longest-living and most valuable observatories.  Today, Hubble continues to provide views of cosmic wonders never before seen and is still at the forefront of astronomy.
The Hubble Space Telescope is an international collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA).For more information visit us at https://nasa.gov/hubble or follow us on social media @NASAHubble.
    ID: 40262 Gallery

    Hubble Space Telescope

    December 4, 2015

    Since its launch in 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope has changed our fundamental understanding of the universe. Hubble’s unique design, allowing it to be repaired and upgraded with advanced technology by astronauts, has made it one of NASA’s longest-living and most valuable observatories. Today, Hubble continues to provide views of cosmic wonders never before seen and is still at the forefront of astronomy.The Hubble Space Telescope is an international collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA).For more information visit us at https://nasa.gov/hubble or follow us on social media @NASAHubble. || Hubble Space Telescope || Overview || Since its launch in 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope has changed our fundamental understanding of the universe. Hubble’s unique design, allowing it to be repaired and upgraded with advanced technology by astronauts, has made it one of NASA’s longest-living and most valuable observatories. Today, Hubble continues to provide views of cosmic wonders never before seen and is still at the forefront of astronomy.The Hubble Space Telescope is an international collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA).For more information visit us at https://nasa.gov/hubble or follow us on social media @NASAHubble. || Science || These videos feature some of the incredible Hubble Space Telescope scientific discoveries made over more than 36 years of observations. || 15015: Hubble’s Highlights from its 36th Year in O... || 15002: "Cosmic Sea Slug" Appears in Hubble’s 36th ... || 14989: Hubble Accidentally Catches Comet Breaking ... || 14924: "Dark Galaxy" Identified by Hubble || 14909: Hubble Spots Giant Vampire Sandwich? || 14837: Hubble Captures Destruction of Worlds || 14901: White Dwarf Eating Pluto-Like Object || 14877: Hubble Uncovers Star’s Unusual Atmosphere || 14882: Interstellar Visitor is Fastest Comet Ever ... || 14871: Hubble Catches Intermediate-Sized Black Hol... || 14847: 100,000 Computer Simulations Reveal Milky W... || 14826: 4 New Hubble Images Released || 14790: Hubble Finds Possible Triple System 3.7 Bil... || 14762: 2.5 Billion Pixel Image of Galaxy Shot by H... || 14674: Hubble Spots Black Hole Beam Causing Stella... || 14702: Jupiter’s Great Red Spot Is Shaking || 14673: NASA’s Hubble, Chandra Find Supermassive Bl... || 14672: Hubble Helps Solve The Mystery of Mars’ Esc... || 14607: Hubble Finds New Evidence for Intermediate-... || 14616: Pillars of Creation Star in New Visualizati... || 14550: Hubble Tracks Jupiter’s Stormy Weather || 14545: Hubble: Our Cosmic Time Machine || 14397: Neptune’s Disappearing Clouds Linked to the... || 14376: Hubble Sees Evaporating Planet Getting The ... || 14350: Hubble Hunts for Intermediate-Sized Black H... || 14337: Hubble’s 33rd Year in Orbit || 14334: Hubble's 33rd Anniversary: Dark Nebula is a... || 14331: Hubble Catches Possible Runaway Black Hole || 14250: How Hubble Images Are Made || 14280: Saturn's Rings Are Acting Strange || 14272: Hubble Finds Hungry Black Hole Twisting Cap... || 14259: Two Exoplanets May Be Water Worlds || 14239: Hubble Captures 3 Faces of Evolving Superno... || 14220: Hubble Reveals Ultra-Relativistic Jet || 14215: Hubble Views Aftermath of DART Impact || 14207: Hubble Spots Spiraling Stars || 14169: Dead Star Caught Ripping Up Planetary Syste... || 14165: Hubble Measures Potential Isolated Black Ho... || 14153: Hubble's Field Guide to Galaxies || 14139: Hubble’s 32nd Year in Orbit || 14138: Hubble's 32nd Anniversary: An Eclectic Gala... || 14125: Record Broken: Hubble Spots Farthest Star E... || 14135: Hubble Confirms Largest Comet Nucleus Ever ... || 14106: Galaxy Collision Creates "Space Triangle" i... || 14076: HUBBLE FINDS A BLACK HOLE IGNITING STAR FOR... || 14042: Mini-Jet Found Near Milky Way’s Supermassiv... || 14024: Tour Stunning Hubble Nebulae Images || 14022: Hubble’s Grand Tour of the Outer Solar Syst... || 13983: Hubble's Field Guide to Nebulae || 13980: Hubble Spotted Something Scary || 13966: Water Vapor Detected In Europa’s Atmosphere || 13939: Hubble Observes Jupiter’s Great Red Spot Ch... || 13924: Einstein Ring Spotted By Hubble || 13904: We Asked NASA Scientists and Astronauts "Wh... || 13893: Sonification of Hubble Ultra Deep Field (20... || 13902: The Hubble Deep Field: Looking Back In Time || 13892: Hubble Finds Evidence of Water Vapor at Jup... || 13884: NASA Returns Hubble to Science Operations || 13872: Mystery of Galaxy's Missing Dark Matter Dee... || 13864: Hubble Tracks Origins Of Energy Blasts || 13840: Hubble's 31st Anniversary: Giant Star on th... || 13320: Hubble Shows Torrential Outflows from Infan... || 13194: Distant Planet May Be On Its Second Atmosph... || 13810: Hubble Uncovers Concentration of Small Blac... || 13783: The Outer Planets: Hubble’s Continuing Lega... || 13742: Hubble's Extraordinary ULLYSES Program || 13749: Hubble Spots Giant Space ‘Pumpkin’ || 13713: Hubble Makes Unexpected Dark Matter Discove... || 13680: Hubble Views the Moon to Study Earth || 13638: Hubble Spots Giant Flapping Shadow || 13593: Hubble’s 30th Year in Orbit || 13591: Hubble’s 30th Anniversary Image || 13576: Hubble Finds Evidence of Mid-Sized Black Ho... || 13520: Happy Lunar New Year from Hubble || 13412: Hubble's Scary New Halloween Image || 13341: Hubble's New Image Of Interstellar Object || 13312: Hubble Finds Water Vapor On Distant Exoplan... || 13307: Hubble’s Brand New Image of Saturn || 13279: Hubble’s Brand New Image of Jupiter || 13244: Hubble’s Brand New Image of Eta Carinae || 13087: Hubble Evidence of Possible Exomoon || 12988: Is 'Oumuamua an Interstellar Asteroid or Co... || 12907: Hubble Views a Galaxy Lacking Dark Matter || 12844: Hubble Observes Atmospheres of TRAPPIST-1 E... || 12862: Hubble Watches Neptune's Dark Storm Die || 12773: Hubble Captures Supernova's Light Echo || 12724: Hubble Sees First-Time Icy Visitor Comet K2 || 12621: Star Gives Birth to Possible Black Hole in ... || 12599: Hubble's Galaxy-Observing Superpowers || 12585: Europa Water Vapor Plumes - More Hubble Evi... || 12570: Hubble Views Jupiter at Opposition || 12539: Hubble Detects a Rogue Supermassive Black H... || 12375: Hubble Directly Images Possible Plumes on E... || 12324: Hubble Explores the Final Frontier || 12319: Hubble Makes First Measurements of Earth-Si... || 12260: Hubble's New View of Mars and Planets || 12223: Hubble Discovers Moon Orbiting Dwarf Planet... || 11725: NASA Missions Take an Unparalleled Look int... || 11019: Hubble, Swift Detect First-ever Changes in ... || 11116: Reviving Fomalhaut b || 11087: Astronomers Uncover a Surprising Trend in G... || 10747: Swift and Hubble Probe an Asteroid Crash || History || These fully produced Hubble web shorts go over the telescope's history, capabilities, or the people involved with its success. || 14912: The Weirdest Worlds Hubble Has Seen || 15016: The Universe Needs Your Eyes! Hubble's Citi... || 14860: Hubble's AI Revolution || 14806: Hubble By The Numbers || 14578: It’s Time to Change Hubble’s Clock || 14528: 40 Years of Non-stop Operations - The Space... || 14539: Welcome to The Lost Universe: NASA’s First ... || 14137: Hubble: Not Yet Imagined || 14047: Hubble and Webb: A New Golden Age of Astron... || 13898: Lyman Spitzer: Making Space For Hubble || 13868: Live Interview from International Space Sta... || 13811: Ahead of its Time: Hubble’s Control Center || 13782: Hubble's 30th Anniversary Celebration || 13823: Hubble Celebrates World Wildlife Day || 13682: Hubble and Whale Sharks? || 13609: Hubble’s Universe: Intergalactic Elegance || 13603: Hubble’s Universe: Milky Way Marvels || 13602: Hubble’s Universe: Solar System Surprises || 13593: Hubble’s 30th Year in Orbit || 13591: Hubble’s 30th Anniversary Image || 13508: How Hubble’s Servicing Mission 3A Saved the... || 13418: Hubble: Voyage of Discovery || 13294: Hubble Celebrates Spitzer's 16th Birthday || 13258: Hubble and Going Forward to the Moon || 13186: Servicing Mission 4 Overview || 13196: Hubble Servicing Mission 4 Archive Teaser || 13189: Hubble's 29th Anniversary || 12937: Hubble's 28th Anniversary || 12931: Hubble Technology Finds Earthly Application... || 12893: Hubble's Messier Marathon Madness || 12766: Hubble Inspires Our Inner Explorer || 12513: Goddard + Hubble, Valentines Since 1984 || 12472: Hubble: Humanity's Quest for Knowledge || 12331: Hubble Traveling Exhibit || 12323: Can you #SpotHubble? || 11822: Hubble Memorable Moments || 10619: 20 Years of Hubble Science || 10436: Making Hubble More Powerful || 10474: Hubble Career Profiles || 10473: The Hubble Legacy: A Collegiate Case Study || Career Aspirations || These videos feature the many career paths that the Hubble Space Telescope has available. From the astronauts who fix Hubble to the developers who work on its software, from the scientists who study the data to the people who spread the word about its discoveries, the telescope is supported by people who traveled unique paths to join the Hubble adventure. Learn about their stories and find out how your skills could lead you to NASA. || 14324: Hubble Women Making History: Beverly Johnso... || 14314: Hubble Women Making History: Daria Outlaw || 14300: Hubble Women Making History: Colleen Townsl... || 14296: Hubble Women Making History: Madison Brodna... || 13251: Hubble Career Page 360 Degree Video || 13717: Dr. John Grunsfeld: NASA Astronaut and Astr... || 13720: Stephanie Clark: Hubble’s Public Outreach S... || 13809: Exploring Our Solar System with Dr. Amy Sim... || 13659: Precision & Design: Making Blankets for Hub... || 13093: Hubble Technology Detected Science Writer's... || 12845: NASA’s First Chief Astronomer, the Mother o... || 12889: Mission Possible: Women of the Hubble Space... || 13340: How the Visually Impaired Experience Hubble... || 14096: International Day of Women and Girls in Sci... || Iconic Imagery || Some of Hubble's most famous and visually stunning images. For a full catalog of Hubble imagery, searchhttp://hubblesite.org/newscenter/ || 13599: Hubble's Cosmic Reef Image Flyby || 12021: Hubble Maps Jupiter in 4k Ultra HD || 30687: Across the Universe: The Hubble Ultra Deep ... || 30681: Exploring the Hubble eXtreme Deep Field || 30679: The Horsehead Nebula in Infrared Light || 30683: Bright Pillars in the Carina Nebula || 30131: Hubble Panoramic View of Orion Nebula Revea... || 30666: Flight to Star Cluster Westerlund 2 || 30667: Visualization of the Veil Supernova Remnant || 11477: Stellar Nurseries || 30485: Hubble Images || 30124: A Journey Into Andromeda || Hubble's Inside The Image || Series that features in-depth explanations on some of Hubble's most iconic images. || 14732: Hubble’s Inside the Image: Saturn's Aurorae || 14731: Hubble’s Inside the Image: Protoplanetary D... || 14235: Hubble’s Inside The Image: N44 Superbubble || 14669: Hubble’s Inside the Image: The Bubble Nebul... || 14253: Hubble’s Inside The Image: Carina Nebula || 14288: Hubble’s Inside The Image: V838 Mon || 14287: Hubble’s Inside The Image: Crab Nebula || 14293: Hubble’s Inside The Image: Earendel || 14326: Hubble’s Inside The Image: Eta Carinae || 14457: Hubble’s Inside The Image: M87 Jet || 14458: Hubble’s Inside The Image: RS Puppis || 14493: Hubble’s Inside The Image: The Eagle Nebula || 14499: Hubble’s Inside The Image: Abell 2744 || 14504: Hubble's Inside the Image: Antennae Galaxie... || 14577: Hubble’s Inside the Image: Herbig-Haro Jet ... || 14587: Hubble’s Inside the Image: Refsdal || 14645: Hubble’s Inside the Image: Cat's Eye Nebula || 14252: Hubble’s Inside The Image: Mystic Mountain || Hubble Science Series || Series that features easy-to-understand explanations on the complicated science discoveries made by the Hubble Space Telescope over the years. || 14611: Hubble Science: Shoemaker-Levy 9: Interplan... || 14503: Hubble Science - Galaxy Mergers: Past and P... || 14358: Hubble Science: Gravitational Waves: Ripple... || 14328: Hubble Science: Multiwavelength Astronomy, ... || 14289: Hubble Science: Einstein Rings, Optical Ill... || 14267: Hubble Science: Planetary Missions, Fossils... || 14247: Hubble Science: Globular Clusters, Stellar ... || 14243: Hubble Science: Hubble Constant, An Expandi... || 13846: Hubble Science: Starbirth Nebulae, Cosmic C... || 13844: Hubble Science: Dark Energy, A Mysterious F... || 13845: Hubble Science: Gravitational Lensing, Natu... || 13815: Hubble Science: Exoplanets, Alien Atmospher... || 13773: Hubble Science: Black Holes, From Myth to R... || Documentaries || These documentaries highlight some of the biggest moments and people involved with the Hubble Space Telescope. || 13634: New Hubble Video Miniseries Goes Behind the... || 13626: Episode 1: Driving The Telescope (Hubble – ... || 13631: Episode 2: An Unexpected Journey (Hubble – ... || 13633: Episode 3: Time Machines (Hubble – Eye in t... || Trivia || Hubble Trivia is a miniseries featuring some frequently asked questions and surprising facts about the famous space telescope. || 13686: Hubble Trivia || Hubble Tool Time || A six-part mini-series about the tools used on the Hubble Space Telescope servicing missions. || 13174: Hubble Tool Time Promo || 13175: Hubble Tool Time Episode 1 - Astronaut Trai... || 13176: Hubble Tool Time Episode 2 - Servicing Miss... || 13177: Hubble Tool Time Episode 3 - Servicing Miss... || 13178: Hubble Tool Time Episode 4 - Servicing Miss... || 13179: Hubble Tool Time Episode 5 - Servicing Miss... || 13180: Hubble Tool Time Episode 6 - Servicing Miss... || Servicing Missions || Hubble, orbiting 353 miles (569 km) above the surface of Earth, is the first telescope designed for space-based maintenance. Astronauts visiting Hubble have made repairs, replaced parts, and updated its technology with new instruments. || 13774: Hubble’s Servicing Mission 1 || 13804: Hubble’s Servicing Mission 2 || 13780: Hubble’s Servicing Mission 3A || 13808: Hubble’s Servicing Mission 3B || 13826: Hubble’s Servicing Mission 4 || 14114: Hubble Servicing Missions Quick Overviews || Servicing Mission 1 - 30th Anniversary Series || This 7-part miniseries celebrates the 30th anniversary of the heroic Servicing Mission 1, the mission which saved the Hubble Space Telescope. || 14466: The Great American Comeback – Hubble’s Serv... || 14459: Going For It All – Hubble’s Servicing Missi... || 14467: The Big Fix – Hubble’s Servicing Mission 1 ... || 14465: Make It or Break It – Hubble’s Servicing Mi... || 14469: The Challenge – Hubble’s Servicing Mission ... || 14468: Test, Test, and Retest – Hubble’s Servicing... || 14470: Then and Now – Hubble’s Servicing Mission 1... || Anniversary Celebrations || Hubble’s unique design, allowing it to be repaired and upgraded with advanced technology by astronauts, has made it one of NASA’s longest-living and most valuable observatories, beaming transformational astronomical images and discoveries to Earth for decades. These videos commemorate Hubble’s birthdays over the years. || 15015: Hubble’s Highlights from its 36th Year in O... || 15002: "Cosmic Sea Slug" Appears in Hubble’s 36th ... || 14824: Hubble’s Highlights from its 35th Year in O... || 14586: Hubble's Servicing Mission 4 Celebrates Its... || 14569: Hubble’s Highlights from its 34th Year in O... || 14570: Hubble's 34th Anniversary Image: The Little... || 14337: Hubble’s 33rd Year in Orbit || 14334: Hubble's 33rd Anniversary: Dark Nebula is a... || 14139: Hubble’s 32nd Year in Orbit || 14138: Hubble's 32nd Anniversary: An Eclectic Gala... || 13840: Hubble's 31st Anniversary: Giant Star on th... || 13782: Hubble's 30th Anniversary Celebration || 13602: Hubble’s Universe: Solar System Surprises || 13603: Hubble’s Universe: Milky Way Marvels || 13609: Hubble’s Universe: Intergalactic Elegance || 13593: Hubble’s 30th Year in Orbit || 13591: Hubble’s 30th Anniversary Image || 20314: Hubble Space Telescope's 30th Anniversary B... || 13599: Hubble's Cosmic Reef Image Flyby || 13561: Hubble 30th Anniversary Logo || 13189: Hubble's 29th Anniversary || 11822: Hubble Memorable Moments || 11866: Edited B-Roll From Hubble 25th Anniversary ... || 11857: Hubble 25th Anniversary Live Shot Resource ... || 11856: Hubble's 25th Anniversary Resource B-Roll C... || 30562: 25 Years of Hubble || 14826: 4 New Hubble Images Released || Archival Footage || Historical footage of the telescope. || 13059: Hubble Archive - Pre-Launch || 13081: Hubble Archive - Launch, STS-31 || 13083: Hubble Archive - Post-Deployment || 13082: Hubble Archive - Servicing Mission 1, STS-6... || 13084: Hubble Archive - Post-Servicing Mission 1 || 13542: Hubble Archive - Servicing Mission 2, STS-8... || 13421: Hubble Archive - Servicing Mission 3A, STS-... || 13566: Hubble Archive - Servicing Mission 3B, STS-... || 13160: Hubble Archive - Servicing Mission 4, STS-1... || 10439: Senator Mikulski Celebrates Hubble Success || B-Roll || B-roll reels of Hubble facilities or events || 13060: 360-Degree Virtual Tour of Hubble Mission O... || 12634: Nancy Grace Roman, The Mother of Hubble - M... || 12428: Hubble Facilities || 11866: Edited B-Roll From Hubble 25th Anniversary ... || Planetarium Videos || These are high resolution videos that are specially made to work within a planetarium. || 14598: Cruising the Cosmic Web (Dome Version) || 14655: Globular Star Cluster Exploration (Dome Ver... || 14656: Galaxy Collision Simulation (Dome Version) || 14657: Journey into the Orion Nebula (Dome Version... || 14658: Flight Through the Orion Nebula in Visible ... || 14661: Flight Through the Orion Nebula in Infrared... || 14662: Flight Through the Orion Nebula in Visible ... || Liveshots || Footage from live Hubble news campaigns || 13764: Hubble Wraps Its 30th Year with Dazzling Ne... || 13560: World’s Most Famous Space Telescope Marks 3... || 13488: Hubble Captures New Look At Ancient Comet F... || 13203: Astronauts Celebrate Hubble Servicing Missi... || 12915: Hubble Space Telescope Celebrates 28 Years:... || 13006: Hubble Sees Summer Storms on Mars and Satur... || 12790: A Hubble Holiday Surprise Hides In Plain Si... || 12750: Hubble Messier Catalog || 12596: Galaxies Galore! Hubble's Last 'Frontier Fi... || 12514: Exoplanet Live Shots 2.23.17 || 12299: New Hubble "Frontier Field" Image Live Shot... || 12236: New Hubble Image Of Mars Live Shots. Great ... || 12070: Hubble Sees A Cosmic "Lightsaber" Live Shot... || 11857: Hubble 25th Anniversary Live Shot Resource ... || Spacecraft Animations || Animations of the Hubble Space Telescope. || 20314: Hubble Space Telescope's 30th Anniversary B... || 10216: HST Fly-By || 10215: HST Video Wipe || 10212: HST Out and Around || 10213: Slow Look at HST 1 || 10214: Slow Look at HST 2 || 10217: HST Zoom-Way-Out || 10117: The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) ||

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  • A vertical version of the video above. This is available for download with and without captions.Credit: NASA/Sophia Roberts
    ID: 15004 Produced Video

    Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is Ready for Launch

    April 21, 2026

    The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is scheduled to launch in September 2026. That is nearly eight months ahead of its required launch readiness date of May 2027.In its final years of construction, the observatory underwent rigorous environmental tests designed to prove it can withstand the demanding journey from Earth to space.These environmental tests included blasting the telescope with the intense sound of a rocket launch, vibrating the observatory while enclosed in a protective clean tent, another launch simulation, and placing it inside a thermal vacuum chamber where it was cooled to the extreme operating temperatures of space.Each of these tests proved Roman's worthiness for early flight and is a testament to the hard work from the entire team. || || 15004 || Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is Ready for Launch || The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is scheduled to launch in September 2026. That is nearly eight months ahead of its required launch readiness date of May 2027.In its final years of construction, the observatory underwent rigorous environmental tests designed to prove it can withstand the demanding journey from Earth to space.These environmental tests included blasting the telescope with the intense sound of a rocket launch, vibrating the observatory while enclosed in a protective clean tent, another launch simulation, and placing it inside a thermal vacuum chamber where it was cooled to the extreme operating temperatures of space.Each of these tests proved Roman's worthiness for early flight and is a testament to the hard work from the entire team. || Music Credit: Astral Geometry by Jon R Mohr Fast Lane by Ruinz Ason, Simon James, Von Hemingway, William RiddimsVoice over: Julie McEnerey, Project Scientist and Shawn Domagal-Goldman Astrophysics Division DirectorCredit: NASA/Sophia Roberts || Roman_Is_Ready_Thumbnail.jpg (1280x720) [752.1 KB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch.en_US.srt [8.2 KB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch.en_US.vtt [7.8 KB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch.webm (3840x2160) [33.3 MB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch.mp4 (3840x2160) [369.4 MB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch.mov (3840x2160) [5.0 GB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch.hwshow [488 bytes] || A vertical version of the video above. This is available for download with and without captions.Credit: NASA/Sophia Roberts || Vertical_Thumnail_-Roman_Ready_for_Launch.jpg (1080x1920) [1.1 MB] || Vertical_Thumnail-Roman_Ready_for_Launch_print.jpg (1024x1820) [1.5 MB] || Vertical_Thumnail-Roman_Ready_for_Launch_searchweb.png (320x180) [118.8 KB] || Vertical_Thumnail-Roman_Ready_for_Launch_web.png (320x569) [337.7 KB] || Vertical_Thumnail-Roman_Ready_for_Launch_thm.png (80x40) [8.0 KB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch-VERTICAL_no_captions.webm (1080x1920) [11.1 MB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch-VERTICAL_no_captions.mp4 (1080x1920) [703.3 MB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch-VERTICAL-captions.mp4 (1080x1920) [704.1 MB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch-VERTICAL.en_US.srt [9.1 KB] || Roman_Ready_for_Launch-_VERTICAL.en_US.vtt [8.6 KB] || Universe || Announcement || Cleanroom || Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope || Solar Panel || Sophia Roberts (eMITS) as Producer || Scott Wiessinger (eMITS) as Videographer || Sophia Roberts (eMITS) as Videographer || Rob Andreoli (eMITS) as Videographer || Francis Reddy (University of Maryland College Park) as Drone pilot || John D. Philyaw (eMITS) as Camera operator || Adriana Manrique Gutierrez (eMITS) as Animator ||

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  • GRACE groundwater storage
    ID: 5574 Visualization

    GRACE FO Soil Moisture Within Continental United States: Monitoring Drought

    March 2, 2026

    The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow-On (GRACE-FO) mission is a joint Earth-science project launched in 2018 by NASA and the German Research Centre for Geosciences to continue the work of the earlier GRACE mission. It consists of two satellites flying about 137 mi (220 km) apart in the same orbit around Earth, constantly measuring tiny changes in the distance between them. These variations occur because changes in Earth’s gravity, caused by shifting masses such as melting ice sheets, groundwater depletion, and ocean circulation, slightly alter the satellites’ speeds and separation. By precisely tracking these changes, GRACE FO allows scientists to map how water moves across the planet, improving our understanding of climate change, sea-level rise, and global water resources.This visualization uses data from GRACE FO to create an index based on percentile dryness, categorizing the dregree of wetness or dryness within three domains: groundwater storage, root zone soil moisture, and surface moisture. It updates weekly, and extends back over a period of a year from the current week.This visualization is created for use within the Earth Information Center (EIC). || || 5574 || GRACE FO Soil Moisture Within Continental United States: Monitoring Drought || The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow-On (GRACE-FO) mission is a joint Earth-science project launched in 2018 by NASA and the German Research Centre for Geosciences to continue the work of the earlier GRACE mission. It consists of two satellites flying about 137 mi (220 km) apart in the same orbit around Earth, constantly measuring tiny changes in the distance between them. These variations occur because changes in Earth’s gravity, caused by shifting masses such as melting ice sheets, groundwater depletion, and ocean circulation, slightly alter the satellites’ speeds and separation. By precisely tracking these changes, GRACE FO allows scientists to map how water moves across the planet, improving our understanding of climate change, sea-level rise, and global water resources.This visualization uses data from GRACE FO to create an index based on percentile dryness, categorizing the dregree of wetness or dryness within three domains: groundwater storage, root zone soil moisture, and surface moisture. It updates weekly, and extends back over a period of a year from the current week.This visualization is created for use within the Earth Information Center (EIC). || GRACE groundwater storage || gws.01000_print.jpg (1024x576) [333.3 KB] || gws.01000_searchweb.png (320x180) [109.5 KB] || gws.01000_web.png (320x180) [109.5 KB] || gws.01000_thm.png (80x40) [7.5 KB] || gws (3840x2160) [1000 Item(s)] || gws.mp4 (3840x2160) [103.0 MB] || GRACE root zone soil moisture || rtzsm.01000_print.jpg (1024x576) [336.0 KB] || rtzsm.01000_searchweb.png (320x180) [109.8 KB] || rtzsm.01000_web.png (320x180) [109.8 KB] || rtzsm.01000_thm.png (80x40) [7.4 KB] || rtzsm (3840x2160) [1000 Item(s)] || rtzsm.mp4 (3840x2160) [154.1 MB] || GRACE surface soil moisture || sfsm.01000_print.jpg (1024x576) [340.9 KB] || sfsm.01000_searchweb.png (320x180) [110.3 KB] || sfsm.01000_web.png (320x180) [110.3 KB] || sfsm.01000_thm.png (80x40) [7.4 KB] || sfsm (3840x2160) [1000 Item(s)] || sfsm.mp4 (3840x2160) [182.7 MB] || Earth || Agricultural science || Agriculture || Climate Indicators || Drought || Drought Effect || Drought Indices || Earth Science || Hyperwall || Land Surface/agriculture Indicators || Soil Moisture/Water Content || Soil science || Soils || [Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE)] || BMNG (Blue Marble: Next Generation) [Terra and Aqua: MODIS] || GRACE Follow-On (Terrestrial Water Storage Anomaly) [Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) Follow-On] || Matthew Rodell (NASA/GSFC) as Scientist || Hiroko Kato Beaudoing (University of Maryland) as Scientist ||

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  • A natural-color Landsat time series of Lake Carnegie, Australia, spanning August 2019 to July 2021, showing seasonal changes in water extent across the lake.
    ID: 15039 Gallery

    Landsat and HLS (Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2) Time Series

    May 6, 2026

    This gallery contains time series animations which utilizes the extensive Landsat data archive of Earth’s surface. Watch seasonal shifts in cropland, long-term coastline change, and more. || 15039 || Landsat and HLS (Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2) Time Series || This gallery contains time series animations which utilizes the extensive Landsat and HLS (Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2) data archive of Earth’s surface. Watch seasonal shifts in cropland, long-term coastline change, and more. || Landsat Time Series || 15005: Mount Saint Helens Recovery || 15037: The Receding Breiðamerkurjökull Glacier, Ic... || 15007: Urban Growth in Nouakchott, Mauritania || 15008: The Shrinking Amistad Reservoir || 15009: Water Loss in Lake Milh (Razzaza), Iraq || 15010: Lake Mead Recedes || 15017: Urban Growth in Las Vegas || 15019: Reno, Nevada and Surrounding Areas || 15020: The Shrinking Great Salt Lake || 15021: The Meandering Ucayali River || 15022: The Ephemeral Lake Carnegie || 15023: Erosion in the Beaufort Sea Coastline || 15024: Deforestation in Santa Cruz, Bolivia || 15025: Saudi Arabia’s Desert Agriculture || 15026: Deforestation in Paraguay’s Gran Chaco || 15027: Undamming the Klamath || 15029: Fluctuations in Egypt’s Lake Nasser || 15030: The Retreat of Alaska’s Mendenhall Glacier || 15034: Braided River in Tibet Redraws Its Channels || 15035: Forty Years of Change in Louisiana’s Wetlan... || HLS (Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2) Time Series || 15036: Lithium Ponds of Tibet’s Lake Zabuye || 15006: Lithium Ponds of Chile's Salar de Atacama || 15018: Agricultural Cycles in the Imperial Valley || 15028: Harmful Algal Blooms in California’s Pyrami... || 15031: Seasons Change in Southwest Virginia || 15032: Plants and Algae Swirl Across a South Afric... || Earth || Landsat || Remote Sensing || Satellite || Time Lapse || Time Machine || Time Series || Landsat || Landsat 7 || Landsat 8 || Landsat 9 || LDCM: Landsat Data Continuity Mission || Ross K. Walter (SSAI) as Visualizer ||

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  • NASA is sending the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft to asteroid Bennu to better understand the evolution of its orbit and retrieve a pristine sample for study on Earth.Watch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.For complete transcript, click here.
    ID: 11098 Produced Video

    OSIRIS-REx Targets Near-Earth Asteroid

    February 7, 2013

    On February 15, 2013, a 45-meter asteroid called Duende (formerly 2012 DA14) passed within 28,000 kilometers of Earth - the closest approach on record for an object of this size. Although such Near-Earth Objects, or NEO's, cross our planet's orbit on a regular basis, only a handful are large enough to pose a threat. One of these objects is asteroid Bennu (formerly 1999 RQ36), a "leftover" from the formation of our solar system. In an effort to better understand NEO's and our planet's own origins, NASA is sending the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft to asteroid Bennu to study the evolution of its orbit and retrieve a sample for return to Earth. || || 11098 || OSIRIS-REx Targets Near-Earth Asteroid || On February 15, 2013, a 45-meter asteroid called Duende (formerly 2012 DA14) passed within 28,000 kilometers of Earth - the closest approach on record for an object of this size. Although such Near-Earth Objects, or NEO's, cross our planet's orbit on a regular basis, only a handful are large enough to pose a threat. One of these objects is asteroid Bennu (formerly 1999 RQ36), a "leftover" from the formation of our solar system. In an effort to better understand NEO's and our planet's own origins, NASA is sending the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft to asteroid Bennu to study the evolution of its orbit and retrieve a sample for return to Earth. || NASA is sending the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft to asteroid Bennu to better understand the evolution of its orbit and retrieve a pristine sample for study on Earth.Watch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel.For complete transcript, click here. || DA14_Statistics.jpg (1280x720) [104.8 KB] || DA14_Statistics_searchweb.png (320x180) [44.2 KB] || DA14_Statistics_thm.png (80x40) [4.9 KB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_1280x720.wmv (1280x720) [77.8 MB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_appletv.m4v (960x540) [70.0 MB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_youtube_hq.mov (1280x720) [89.7 MB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_appletv.webmhd.webm (960x540) [31.9 MB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_appletv_subtitles.m4v (960x540) [69.9 MB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER.mov (640x360) [63.1 MB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_ipod_lg.m4v (640x360) [28.4 MB] || Science_of_Asteroids_Captions.en_US.srt [2.8 KB] || Science_of_Asteroids_Captions.en_US.vtt [2.8 KB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_ipod_sm.mp4 (320x240) [15.2 MB] || G2013-014_Science_of_NEO_MASTER_prores.mov (1280x720) [2.2 GB] || OSIRS-REx Principal Investigator Dante Lauretta, University of Arizona, discusses the flyby of asteroid 2012 DA14. || Dante_Lauretta_youtube_hq00027_print.jpg (1024x576) [80.9 KB] || Dante_Lauretta_youtube_hq_web.png (320x180) [249.3 KB] || Dante_Lauretta_youtube_hq.mov (1280x720) [37.5 MB] || Dante_Lauretta_1280x720.wmv (1280x720) [34.4 MB] || Dante_Lauretta_appletv.m4v (960x540) [28.9 MB] || Dante_Lauretta_720x480.webmhd.webm (960x540) [5.4 MB] || Dante_Lauretta_ipod_lg.m4v (640x360) [11.7 MB] || Dante_Lauretta_prores.mov (1280x720) [1002.7 MB] || Dante_Lauretta_720x480.wmv (720x480) [23.0 MB] || Dante_Lauretta.mov (640x360) [27.4 MB] || GSFC_20130207_OSIRIS_m11098_Dante_Lauretta.en_US.srt [1.6 KB] || GSFC_20130207_OSIRIS_m11098_Dante_Lauretta.en_US.vtt [1.6 KB] || Dante_Lauretta_ipod_sm.mp4 (320x240) [4.5 MB] || This video file contains animations of the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft and an interview with NASA Deputy Project Scientist Dr. Joseph Nuth. || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_youtube_hq02702_print.jpg (1024x576) [118.7 KB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_youtube_hq_web.png (320x180) [234.9 KB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_appletv.webmhd.webm (960x540) [50.9 MB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_youtube_hq.mov (1280x720) [168.0 MB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_appletv.m4v (960x540) [131.2 MB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_1280x720.wmv (1280x720) [144.2 MB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_ipod_lg.m4v (640x360) [51.2 MB] || GSFC_20130207_OSIRIS_m11098_VF.en_US.srt [1.9 KB] || GSFC_20130207_OSIRIS_m11098_VF.en_US.vtt [1.9 KB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER.mov (640x360) [125.3 MB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_ipod_sm.mp4 (320x240) [25.8 MB] || G2013-014_Video_File_MASTER_prores.mov (1280x720) [5.2 GB] || For More Information || See NASA.gov || Planets & Moons || Asteroid || Astrobiology || Bennu || HDTV || Narrated || Near-Earth Object || OSIRIS-REx || Solar System || Yarkovsky Effect || OSIRIS-REX || Narrated Movies || Science of Asteroids (Produced by: Dan Jacob) || Dan Gallagher (eMITS) as Producer || Chris Smith (HTSI) as Writer || Chris Meaney (HTSI) as Animator || Chris Smith (HTSI) as Animator || Michael McClare (HTSI) as Animator || Walt Feimer (HTSI) as Animator || Michael Lentz (USRA) as Animator || Chris Smith (HTSI) as Videographer || Dan Gallagher (USRA) as Video editor || Dan Gallagher (eMITS) as Narrator || Dante Lauretta (The University of Arizona) as Scientist || Edward Beshore (The University of Arizona) as Scientist || Joseph A Nuth (NASA/GSFC) as Scientist ||

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  • A infrared-color Landsat time series of Iceland’s Breiðamerkurjökull glacier spanning from 1985 to 2025, revealing the rapid retreat of the ice edge and the expansion of the Jökulsárlón glacial lagoon over time.
    ID: 15037 Visualization

    The Receding Breiðamerkurjökull Glacier, Iceland

    May 6, 2026

    Breiðamerkurjökull, an outlet glacier of Iceland’s Vatnajökull ice cap, has been in rapid retreat for decades. As the ice shrinks, it expands the deepening Jökulsárlón lagoon. Warm saltwater from the North Atlantic flows into this basin, accelerating the melting and calving of the glacier's edge. Because these icy landscapes are too vast and remote to measure entirely from the ground, Landsat’s record is vital for tracking trends over time. || 15037 || The Receding Breiðamerkurjökull Glacier, Iceland || Breiðamerkurjökull, an outlet glacier of Iceland’s Vatnajökull ice cap, has been in rapid retreat for decades. As the ice shrinks, it expands the deepening Jökulsárlón lagoon. Warm saltwater from the North Atlantic flows into this basin, accelerating the melting and calving of the glacier's edge. Because these icy landscapes are too vast and remote to measure entirely from the ground, Landsat’s record is vital for tracking trends over time. || A infrared-color Landsat time series of Iceland’s Breiðamerkurjökull glacier spanning from 1985 to 2025, revealing the rapid retreat of the ice edge and the expansion of the Jökulsárlón glacial lagoon over time. || Breiðamerkurjökull_Glacier_-Hyperwall.mp4 (5760x3240) [385.4 MB] || Breiðamerkurjökull_Glacier-Web.mp4 (1920x1080) [6.9 MB] || Breiðamerkurjökull_Glacier-_Vertical.mp4 (1080x1920) [10.2 MB] || 15037---Icelandic-Glacier_thumb.png (1280x720) [1.4 MB] || 15037---Icelandic-Glacier_print.jpg (1280x720) [665.1 KB] || 15037---Icelandic-Glacier_searchweb.jpg (1280x720) [665.1 KB] || Earth || Glaciers || Landsat || Satellite || Time Series || Landsat || [Landsat] || Ross K. Walter (SSAI) as Visualizer ||

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  • A natural-color HLS time series of Tibet’s Lake Zabuye spanning from February 26, 2025, to March 1, 2026, revealing the evaporation and shifting colors of its lithium ponds over time.
    ID: 15036 Visualization

    Lithium Ponds of Tibet’s Lake Zabuye

    May 6, 2026

    Lake Zabuye, located high on the Tibetan Plateau, is a hypersaline, alkaline lake that holds some of the world's highest concentrations of lithium. In this remote, arid, and cold environment, mining operations pump mineral-rich underground brines into shallow surface pools. || 15036 || Lithium Ponds of Tibet’s Lake Zabuye || Lake Zabuye, located high on the Tibetan Plateau, is a hypersaline, alkaline lake that holds some of the world's highest concentrations of lithium. In this remote, arid, and cold environment, mining operations pump mineral-rich underground brines into shallow surface pools. Under the region's intense high-altitude sunlight, the brines slowly evaporate, allowing miners to access concentrated lithium. This Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2 (HLS) sequence showcases the vibrant blue color of the evaporation ponds as water vanishes to reveal this critical mineral. || A natural-color HLS time series of Tibet’s Lake Zabuye spanning from February 26, 2025, to March 1, 2026, revealing the evaporation and shifting colors of its lithium ponds over time. || Lake_Zabuye_-Hyperwall.mp4 (1920x1080) [393.5 MB] || Lake_Zabuye-Web.mp4 (1920x1080) [9.8 MB] || Lake_Zabuye-_Vertical.mp4 (2160x3840) [49.3 MB] || 15036---Lake-Zabuye_thumb.png (1280x720) [1.6 MB] || 15036---Lake-Zabuye_print.jpg (1280x720) [668.6 KB] || 15036---Lake-Zabuye_searchweb.jpg (1280x720) [668.6 KB] || Earth || Landsat || Satellite || Time Series || Landsat || [Landsat] || Ross K. Walter (SSAI) as Visualizer ||

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  • A infrared-color Landsat time series of Louisiana’s Bay Dosgris from 1985 to 2024, showing wetlands converting to open water as sea level rise and storms reshape the Gulf Coast.
    ID: 15035 Visualization

    Forty Years of Change in Louisiana’s Wetlands

    May 6, 2026

    Louisiana's coastline is on the move. Utilizing infrared-color imagery to contrast water and vegetation, this Landsat time series tracks 40 years of dynamic shifts across Louisiana’s fragile coast. From abrupt hurricane-induced flooding to the gradual, permanent drowning of vital marshes, these visualizations capture an ecosystem in perpetual motion. || 15035 || Forty Years of Change in Louisiana’s Wetlands || Louisiana's coastline is on the move. Utilizing infrared-color imagery to contrast water and vegetation, this Landsat time series tracks 40 years of dynamic shifts across Louisiana’s fragile coast. From abrupt hurricane-induced flooding to the gradual, permanent drowning of vital marshes, these visualizations capture an ecosystem in perpetual motion. || A infrared-color Landsat time series of Louisiana’s Bay Dosgris from 1985 to 2024, showing wetlands converting to open water as sea level rise and storms reshape the Gulf Coast. || Louisiana_Wetlands_-Hyperwall.mp4 (5760x3240) [828.3 MB] || Louisiana_Wetlands-Web-_1.mp4 (1920x1080) [9.2 MB] || Louisiana_Coastline-Vertical_Reel-4.mp4 (1080x1920) [236.5 MB] || 15035---Louisiana-Wetlands_thumb.png (1280x720) [1.7 MB] || 15035---Louisiana-Wetlands_print.jpg (1280x720) [1.2 MB] || 15035---Louisiana-Wetlands_searchweb.jpg (1280x720) [1.2 MB] || Earth || Landsat || Satellite || Time Series || Landsat || [Landsat] || Ross K. Walter (SSAI) as Visualizer ||

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  • A natural-color Landsat time series of the Yarlung Zangbo River from 1988 to 2025 revealing the shapeshifting nature of the river as it flows across the Tibetan Plateau.
    ID: 15034 Visualization

    Braided River in Tibet Redraws Its Channels

    May 6, 2026

    This Landsat time series shows the channels of Tibet’s Yarlung Zangbo river shifting substantially from year to year due to high sediment discharge from nearby steep mountains. Flooding events frequently remobilize the steady accumulation of loose, coarse sediment, preventing vegetation from becoming established on the sandbars. || 15034 || Braided River in Tibet Redraws Its Channels || This Landsat time series shows the channels of Tibet’s Yarlung Zangbo river shifting substantially from year to year due to high sediment discharge from nearby steep mountains. Flooding events frequently remobilize the steady accumulation of loose, coarse sediment, preventing vegetation from becoming established on the sandbars. || A natural-color Landsat time series of the Yarlung Zangbo River from 1988 to 2025 revealing the shapeshifting nature of the river as it flows across the Tibetan Plateau. || Yarlung_Zangbo_River_-Hyperwall.mp4 (5760x3240) [431.9 MB] || Yarlung_Zangbo_River-_Web.mp4 (1920x1080) [7.1 MB] || Yarlung-Zangbo-River-Vertical-v2.mp4 (1080x1920) [157.7 MB] || 15034---Braided-River_thumb.png (1280x720) [1.9 MB] || 15034---Braided-River_print.jpg (1280x720) [951.4 KB] || 15034---Braided-River_searchweb.jpg (1280x720) [951.4 KB] || Earth || Landsat || River || Satellite || Time Series || Landsat || [Landsat] || Ross K. Walter (SSAI) as Visualizer ||

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  • Selected b-roll from Marina, CA (Twin Otter platform)
    ID: 14723 Produced Video

    PACE Scientists Take to the Sea and Air (and Really High Air)

    December 2, 2024

    Footage note: 4:18-4:22 courtesy of pond5.comMusic: "Changing Seasons," "Magnetism," "Autumn Shower," "Elegance," "Near Our Home," "Hope for Tomorrow," "Drop of Water," "North Winds," "Prelude and Transition," Universal Production Music.Complete transcript available. || pace-pax-thumb_print.jpg (1024x576) [186.5 KB] || pace-pax-thumb.png (2560x1440) [2.6 MB] || pace-pax-thumb_searchweb.png (180x320) [91.0 KB] || pace-pax-thumb_thm.png (80x40) [6.8 KB] || PACE-PAX_final_vid.en_US.srt [18.0 KB] || PACE-PAX_final_vid.en_US.vtt [17.0 KB] || PACE-PAX_finalvid_ProRes.webm (3840x2160) [168.5 MB] || PACE-PAX_finalvid_YT.mp4 (3840x2160) [2.6 GB] || PACE-PAX_CAPTIONED.mp4 (3840x2160) [2.6 GB] || PACE-PAX_finalvid_ProRes.mov (3840x2160) [35.0 GB] || || 14723 || PACE Scientists Take to the Sea and Air (and Really High Air) || Footage note: 4:18-4:22 courtesy of pond5.comMusic: "Changing Seasons," "Magnetism," "Autumn Shower," "Elegance," "Near Our Home," "Hope for Tomorrow," "Drop of Water," "North Winds," "Prelude and Transition," Universal Production Music.Complete transcript available. || pace-pax-thumb_print.jpg (1024x576) [186.5 KB] || pace-pax-thumb.png (2560x1440) [2.6 MB] || pace-pax-thumb_searchweb.png (180x320) [91.0 KB] || pace-pax-thumb_thm.png (80x40) [6.8 KB] || PACE-PAX_final_vid.en_US.srt [18.0 KB] || PACE-PAX_final_vid.en_US.vtt [17.0 KB] || PACE-PAX_finalvid_ProRes.webm (3840x2160) [168.5 MB] || PACE-PAX_finalvid_YT.mp4 (3840x2160) [2.6 GB] || PACE-PAX_CAPTIONED.mp4 (3840x2160) [2.6 GB] || PACE-PAX_finalvid_ProRes.mov (3840x2160) [35.0 GB] || Field Validation Campaign, But Accidentally Wes Anderson (social video for Instagram Reels)Music: “Concerto For 2 Violins Lute & BC in D Maj. (Allegro)” by Antonio Lucio Vivaldi; Koka Media; Universal Production Music || wesanderson_thumb.png (1194x2142) [4.1 MB] || wesanderson_thumb_print.jpg (1024x1837) [479.6 KB] || wesanderson_thumb_searchweb.png (320x180) [95.2 KB] || wesanderson_thumb_thm.png (80x40) [10.4 KB] || PACEPAX_MarinaCA_WesAnderson_FINAL.mp4 (1080x1920) [68.5 MB] || Life Support for ER-2 Pilots (Optimized for Instagram Reels)Music: "Emotional Grid," "Lift Me Up Higher," "You Say It's Over," Universal Production Music. || ER-2_thumb.png (562x1008) [1002.5 KB] || ER-2_thumb_print.jpg (1024x1836) [329.3 KB] || ER-2_thumb_searchweb.png (320x180) [83.9 KB] || ER-2_thumb_thm.png (80x40) [7.3 KB] || ER2_Life_Support_Reel.mp4 (1080x1920) [110.8 MB] || ER2_Life_Support.en_US.srt [2.4 KB] || ER2_Life_Support.en_US.vtt [2.3 KB] || Selected b-roll from Marina, CA (Twin Otter platform) || Marina_TwinOtter_b-roll.01000_print.jpg (1024x576) [217.7 KB] || Marina_TwinOtter_b-roll.01000_searchweb.png (320x180) [108.2 KB] || Marina_TwinOtter_b-roll.01000_thm.png (80x40) [7.2 KB] || Marina_TwinOtter_b-roll.webm (3840x2160) [32.7 MB] || Marina_TwinOtter_b-roll.mp4 (3840x2160) [137.3 MB] || Marina_TwinOtter_b-roll.mov (3840x2160) [6.5 GB] || Selected b-roll from NASA Armstrong Flight Research Center, CA (ER-2 platform) || er2brollthumb_print.jpg (1024x566) [71.1 KB] || er2brollthumb.png (3352x1854) [9.7 MB] || er2brollthumb_searchweb.png (320x180) [61.8 KB] || er2brollthumb_thm.png (80x40) [7.6 KB] || Armstrong_ER-2_b-roll.webm (3840x2160) [33.1 MB] || Armstrong_ER-2_b-roll.mp4 (3840x2160) [148.2 MB] || Armstrong_ER-2_b-roll.mov (3840x2160) [8.2 GB] || Selected b-roll from Santa Barbara, CA (R/V Shearwater platform) || santabarbarathumb_print.jpg (1024x577) [131.3 KB] || santabarbarathumb.png (3320x1872) [8.8 MB] || santabarbarathumb_searchweb.png (320x180) [80.8 KB] || santabarbarathumb_thm.png (80x40) [8.9 KB] || SantaBarbara_Shearwater_b-roll.webm (3840x2160) [43.1 MB] || SantaBarbara_Shearwater_b-roll.mp4 (3840x2160) [124.9 MB] || SantaBarbara_Shearwater_b-roll.mov (3840x2160) [6.7 GB] || Graphic showing the principal platforms in the PACE-PAX campaign. Includes an alpha channel version. || Main_Components_ALLv2_nodissolve_print.jpg (1024x576) [84.3 KB] || Main_Components_ALL_ALPHA.png (3840x2160) [472.1 KB] || Main_Components_ALL_nodissolve.png (3840x2160) [1.7 MB] || Main_Components_ALLv2_nodissolve.png (3840x2160) [1.7 MB] || Main_Components_ALLv2_nodissolve_searchweb.png (320x180) [55.3 KB] || Main_Components_ALLv2_nodissolve_thm.png (80x40) [4.9 KB] || Earth || airborne || California || Field Campaign || Location || Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) || Narrated Movies || Ryan Fitzgibbons (eMITS) as Producer || Elizabeth C. Wilk (eMITS) as Producer || Grace Weikert (eMITS) as Producer || Elizabeth C. Wilk (eMITS) as Videographer || Grace Weikert (eMITS) as Videographer || Ryan Fitzgibbons (eMITS) as Videographer || Ryan Fitzgibbons (eMITS) as Writer || Ryan Fitzgibbons (eMITS) as Editor || Ryan Fitzgibbons (eMITS) as Narrator || Kirk Knobelspiesse (NASA/GSFC) as Scientist || Ivona Cetinic (Morgan State University) as Scientist || Brian Cairns (NASA/GSFC GISS) as Scientist || Jeremy Werdell (NASA/GSFC) as Scientist || Ryan Fitzgibbons (eMITS) as Animator || Greg Shirah (NASA/GSFC) as Visualizer || Kel Elkins (USRA) as Visualizer || Kirk Knobelspiesse (NASA/GSFC) as Interviewee || Ivona Cetinic (Morgan State University) as Interviewee || Brian Cairns (NASA/GSFC GISS) as Interviewee ||

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  • A natural-color HLS time series showing vivid green blooms forming, drifting, and fading in Hartbeespoort Dam over the course of a year.
    ID: 15032 Visualization

    Plants and Algae Swirl Across a South African Reservoir

    May 6, 2026

    On clear days in Hartbeespoort, South Africa, Landsat and Sentinel-2 images often reveal a reservoir with shades of deep blue interrupted by drifting patches of vivid green. Over the years, these shifting features have included algae blooms—which can affect water quality, ecosystems, and nearby human communities—along with several types of invasive aquatic plants. || || 15032 || Plants and Algae Swirl Across a South African Reservoir || On clear days in Hartbeespoort, South Africa, Landsat and Sentinel-2 images often reveal a reservoir with shades of deep blue interrupted by drifting patches of vivid green. Over the years, these shifting features have included algae blooms—which can affect water quality, ecosystems, and nearby human communities—along with several types of invasive aquatic plants. || A natural-color HLS time series showing vivid green blooms forming, drifting, and fading in Hartbeespoort Dam over the course of a year. || Hartbeespoort_Dam_-Hyperwall.mp4 (5760x3240) [450.0 MB] || Hartbeespoort_Dam-Web.mp4 (1920x1080) [22.3 MB] || Hartbeespoort_Dam-_Vertical.mp4 (2160x3840) [56.5 MB] || 15032---Hartbeespoort-Dam_thumb.png (1280x720) [1.7 MB] || 15032---Hartbeespoort-Dam_print.jpg (1280x720) [744.7 KB] || 15032---Hartbeespoort-Dam_searchweb.jpg (1280x720) [744.7 KB] || Earth || Landsat || Remote Sensing || Time Lapse || Time Series || Landsat || [Landsat] || Ross K. Walter (SSAI) as Visualizer ||

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  • "Moments of Moon Joy," Produced by Ryan FitzgibbonsMusic: "Flight," Universal Production MusicContains both horizontal and vertical formats.
    ID: 15012 Produced Video

    Artemis II Mission Social Media Products

    May 6, 2026

    Short videos produced for and during the duration of the Artemis II flight || || 15012 || Artemis II Mission Social Media Products || Short videos produced for and during the duration of the Artemis II flight || "Moments of Moon Joy," Produced by Ryan FitzgibbonsMusic: "Flight," Universal Production MusicContains both horizontal and vertical formats. || Moon_Joy_Horizontal_Thumb.png (1920x1080) [3.7 MB] || Moon_Joy_Vertical_Thumb.png (1080x1920) [3.4 MB] || Moon_Joy_Horizontal_Thumb_print.jpg (1024x576) [311.6 KB] || Moon_Joy_Horizontal_Thumb_searchweb.png (320x180) [125.3 KB] || Moon_Joy_Horizontal_Thumb_thm.png (80x40) [8.3 KB] || Moon_Joy_Horizontal.mp4 (1920x1080) [103.5 MB] || Moon_Joy_Vertical_CaptionsOn.mp4 (1080x1920) [103.9 MB] || Moon_Joy_Vertical_CaptionsOFF.mp4 (1080x1920) [103.8 MB] || Moon_Joy_Horizontal.en_US.srt [2.1 KB] || Moon_Joy_Horizontal.en_US.vtt [1.9 KB] || MoonJoy_Vertical.en_US.srt [2.2 KB] || MoonJoy_Vertical.en_US.vtt [2.1 KB] || "Day 5 Wrapup," Produced by Liz Wilk and Ryan FitzgibbonsMusic: "Timeless Icons," Universal Production Music || day5_wrapup_thumb.png (1182x2140) [2.2 MB] || day5_wrapup_thumb_print.jpg (1024x1853) [215.0 KB] || day5_wrapup_thumb_searchweb.png (320x180) [65.1 KB] || day5_wrapup_thumb_thm.png (80x40) [9.2 KB] || Wrap_up_Day_5_Vertical_YouTube.mp4 (1080x1920) [98.5 MB] || Wrap_up_Day_5_Vertical_YouTube.en_US.srt [2.7 KB] || Wrap_up_Day_5_Vertical_YouTube.en_US.vtt [2.6 KB] || "Solar Eclipse as Seen by Artemis II Crew," Produced by Ryan FitzgibbonsMusic: "Buttercups Bloom," Universal Production Music || eclipse_thumb.png (1188x2130) [1.8 MB] || eclipse_thumb_print.jpg (1024x1835) [170.5 KB] || eclipse_thumb_searchweb.png (320x180) [51.1 KB] || eclipse_thumb_thm.png (80x40) [7.6 KB] || Eclipse_Vertical.mp4 (1080x1920) [16.2 MB] || Planets & Moons || Artemis || Artemis Program (Human Spaceflight — Moon to Mars) (Artemis) || Ryan Fitzgibbons (eMITS) as Producer || Dan Gallagher (eMITS) as Producer || Lauren Ward (eMITS) as Producer || Sophia Roberts (eMITS) as Producer || Swarupa Nune (eMITS) as Producer || James Tralie (eMITS) as Producer || Lacey Young (eMITS) as Producer || Joy Ng (eMITS) as Producer || Elizabeth C. Wilk (eMITS) as Producer || Paul Morris (eMITS) as Producer || Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET Systems, Inc.) as Technical support || Sarah Loff (Mori Associates Inc) as Production manager ||

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  • A natural-color HLS time series of southwest Virginia's forests, spanning from October 4 to December 6, 2025, showing the dramatic seasonal transformation as lush summer landscapes fade through fall and into winter across the Appalachian Mountains.
    ID: 15031 Visualization

    Seasons Change in Southwest Virginia

    May 6, 2026

    The animation showcases the Valley and Ridge province of the Appalachian Mountains, named for its characteristic parallel ridges and valleys. When the supercontinent Pangea formed, the region was compressed, one of the factors producing this folded landscape.The region’s forests, largely deciduous, undergo color change in the fall before shedding their leaves. Certain species change color earlier, while others lose their green pigment later in the season. || 15031 || Seasons Change in Southwest Virginia || As the seasons sweep through southwest Virginia, the lush summer landscape transforms, fading into fall and winter.From October 4 to December 6, 2025, the forests in this animation turn from green to orange to brown before being blanketed by white snow. The animation is composed of images from Harmonized Landsat and Sentinel-2 (HLS), a NASA product that combines imagery from the NASA/USGS Landsat 8 and Landsat 9 satellites and the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-2A, 2B, and 2C satellites.The animation showcases the Valley and Ridge province of the Appalachian Mountains, named for its characteristic parallel ridges and valleys. When the supercontinent Pangea formed, the region was compressed, one of the factors producing this folded landscape.The region’s forests, largely deciduous, undergo color change in the fall before shedding their leaves. Certain species change color earlier, while others lose their green pigment later in the season. Because of Virginia’s rich tree diversity—nearly 100 species of deciduous trees are native to the state—the landscape becomes a patchwork of shifting colors. || A natural-color HLS time series of southwest Virginia's forests, spanning from October 4 to December 6, 2025, showing the dramatic seasonal transformation as lush summer landscapes fade through fall and into winter across the Appalachian Mountains. || Southwest_Virginia_-Hyperwall.mp4 (5760x3240) [335.3 MB] || Southwest_Virginia-_Web.mp4 (1920x1080) [10.9 MB] || Blacksburg-Va-FadeToWinter-Vertical.mp4 (2160x3840) [42.3 MB] || 15031---Southwest-Virginia_thumb.png (1280x720) [1.9 MB] || 15031---Southwest-Virginia_print.jpg (1280x720) [940.6 KB] || 15031---Southwest-Virginia_searchweb.jpg (1280x720) [940.6 KB] || Earth || Landsat || Satellite || Seasons || Time Series || Landsat || [Landsat] || Ross K. Walter (SSAI) as Visualizer ||

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