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NASA's EPIC camera, aboard NOAA's DSCOVR satellite, captured a unique view of this week's solar eclipse. While residents of the Western Pacific looked
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Launched one year ago, on February 11, 2015, DSCOVR – the nation’s first operational satellite in deep space – is now orbiting one million miles away
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March 4, 2016, was the 6th anniversary of the launch of GOES-P (now GOES-15), one of NOAA’s Eyes in the Sky for the Western Hemisphere.
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Why do satellites look like that? Understanding the odd shapes and sizes of these precision machines! The JPSS-1 satellite…
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Earth's atmosphere contains the air we breathe, the weather we experience and is our natural shield against the harsh conditions of space.
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While it may “come in on little cat feet,”unexpected areas of fog can drastically reduce visibility, creating dangerous…
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Polar-orbiting weather satellites are essential assets that provide data that enable forecasters to make more accurate weather predictions three to se
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The successful launch of Jason-3 on January 17, 2016, was a major accomplishment for the Jason mission, but it is by no means the end of the road. On