Showing posts with label nasa television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nasa television. Show all posts

10/23/2019

NASA Explorers S3 E3: The Carbon Problem

The Carbon Problem

In the Arctic, fires are a characteristic piece of the environment. Be that as it may, as the atmosphere changes, fires are consuming longer and more sizzling, discharging since quite a while ago covered carbon from the dirt.



NASA Explorers are looking from high in the sky to far beneath the ground to all the more likely see how a warming atmosphere influences fires in the Arctic… and how flames in the area will add to environmental change later on S3 E3

2/26/2013

NASA television, ScienceCasts: What Exploded Over Russia? video




Two weeks after an asteroid exploded over Russia's Ural mountains, scientists are making progress understanding the origin and make-up of the unexpected space rock. 

This week's ScienceCast presents their latest results.

1/28/2013

NASA Television ScienceCast: Record-Setting Asteroid Flyby video




On Feb. 15th an asteroid about half the size of a football field will fly past Earth closer than many man-made satellites.

Since regular sky surveys began in the 1990s, astronomers have never seen an object so big come so close to our planet.

1/07/2013

NASA Television ScienceCasts: Dark Lightning video




Researchers studying thunderstorms have made a surprising discovery: The lightning we see with our eyes has a dark competitor that discharges storm clouds and flings antimatter into space. Astrophysicists and meteorologists are scrambling to understand "dark lightning."

12/22/2012

NASA Television shares this inspiring production by Italian videomaker




NASA Television shares this inspiring production by Italian videomaker, Giacomo Sardelli, about the International Space Station, its inhabitants, and its role in space exploration.

Sardelli writes of the video, "I'm not the first one to use NASA's pictures taken from the International Space Station to craft a Timelapse video. You can find many of them on the Internet, that's where my inspiration came from. What I wanted to do, though, was to look beyond the intrinsic beauty of those pictures, and use them to tell a story and share the messages sent by the astronauts who worked on the station in the last 11 years."