Backgrounders

El Niño: Pacific Wind and Current Changes Bring Warm, Wild Weather
Article

El Niño: Pacific Wind and Current Changes Bring Warm, Wild Weather

El Niño is one of the most important weather-producing phenomena on Earth. The changing ocean conditions disrupt weather patterns and marine life in the Pacific and around the world. Satellites are unraveling the many traits of this wild child of weather.

Published Feb 14, 2017

Atmosphere Heat Water Remote Sensing

Sea Ice
Article

Sea Ice

Polar sea ice grows and shrinks dramatically each year, driven by seasonal cycles. Habitat for wildlife and harbinger of changing climate, sea ice offers scientists important clues about the state of our planet.

Published Sep 16, 2016

Water Snow and Ice Remote Sensing

Why is that Forest Red and That Cloud Blue?
Article

Why is that Forest Red and That Cloud Blue?

Are you distracted by unusual colors in satellite images? They are not photographs, and understanding the difference between them is the key to unlocking the power of false-color images.

Published Mar 4, 2014

Remote Sensing

How to Interpret a Satellite Image: Five Tips and Strategies
Article

How to Interpret a Satellite Image: Five Tips and Strategies

What do you do when presented with a new satellite image? Here's what the Earth Observatory team does to understand the view.

Published Nov 18, 2013

Remote Sensing

Where Is the Hottest Place on Earth?
Article

Where Is the Hottest Place on Earth?

Satellite research shows that the world’s hottest spot changes, though the conditions don’t. Think dry, rocky, and dark-colored lands...and cities.

Published Apr 5, 2012

Heat Land Remote Sensing

The Carbon Cycle
Article

The Carbon Cycle

Carbon flows between the atmosphere, land, and ocean in a cycle that encompasses nearly all life and sets the thermostat for Earth's climate. By burning fossil fuels, people are changing the carbon cycle with far-reaching consequences.

Published Jun 16, 2011

Atmosphere Land

Aerosols: Tiny Particles, Big Impact
Article

Aerosols: Tiny Particles, Big Impact

Tiny aerosol particles can be found over oceans, deserts, mountains, forests, ice sheets, and every ecosystem in between. They drift in the air from the stratosphere to the surface. Despite their small size, they have major impacts on our climate and our health.

Published Nov 2, 2010

Atmosphere Human Presence

The Water Cycle
Article

The Water Cycle

Landscape sculptor. Climate driver. Life supporter. Water is the most important molecule on our planet.

Published Oct 1, 2010

Atmosphere Land Life Water

What are Phytoplankton?
Article

What are Phytoplankton?

Microscopic plant-like organisms called phytoplankton are the base of the marine food web, and they play a key role in removing carbon dioxide from the air.

Published Jul 16, 2010

Life Water

Global Warming
Article

Global Warming

Global warming is happening now, and scientists are confident that greenhouse gases are responsible. To understand what this means for humanity, it is necessary to understand what global warming is, how scientists know it's happening, and how they predict future climate.

Published Jun 3, 2010

Atmosphere Heat Land Water

Catalog of Earth Satellite Orbits
Article

Catalog of Earth Satellite Orbits

Different orbits give satellites different vantage points for viewing Earth. This fact sheet describes the common Earth satellite orbits and some of the challenges of maintaining them.

Published Sep 4, 2009

Remote Sensing

Planetary Motion: The History of an Idea That Launched the Scientific Revolution
Article

Planetary Motion: The History of an Idea That Launched the Scientific Revolution

Attempts of Renaissance astronomers to explain the puzzling path of planets across the night sky led to modern science’s understanding of gravity and motion.

Published Jul 7, 2009

Land

Climate and Earth’s Energy Budget
Article

Climate and Earth’s Energy Budget

Earth’s temperature depends on how much sunlight the land, oceans, and atmosphere absorb, and how much heat the planet radiates back to space. This fact sheet describes the net flow of energy through different parts of the Earth system, and explains how the planetary energy budget stays in balance.

Published Jan 14, 2009

Heat

The Ocean’s Carbon Balance
Article

The Ocean’s Carbon Balance

The amount of carbon dioxide that the ocean can take from the atmosphere is controlled by both natural cycles and human activity.

Published Jul 1, 2008

Water

Tropical Deforestation
Article

Tropical Deforestation

Tropical forests are home to half the Earth's species, and their trees are an immense standing reservoir of carbon. Deforestation will have increasingly serious consequences for biodiversity, humans, and climate.

Published Mar 30, 2007

Land Life