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Watching Our Oceans
Published:
May 20, 2008
Watching Our Oceans
ENLARGE
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Recorded live launch broadcast of Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich
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It's hard to "see" sea level rise by just looking at the ocean, but its effects are very real.
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For NASA JPL engineer Parag Vaze, studying Earth’s rising ocean has been a career three decades in the making.
NASA Engineer Observes Sea Level Rise from Space for 30 Years
Fathoming the forces that determine global sea levels can be daunting. We present a guide to the basics of ocean surface topography.
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For over 20 years NASA has been tracking the global surface topography of the ocean in order to understand the important role it plays in our daily lives. Climate change is causing our Ocean to war...
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Global sea level rise is accelerating incrementally over time rather than increasing at a steady rate, as previously thought, according to a new study based on 25 years of NASA and European satelli...
Sea Level Rise Accelerates Over Time
One of the best ways to understand Earth's ocean is from the perspective of space.
Climate Change and the Global Ocean
The joint U.S.-European Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich is the next in a line of Earth-observing satellites that will collect the most accurate data yet on sea level and how it changes over time. With ...
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SSH and SST - Global
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Jason-3 Animation
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The ocean is responsible for Earth's mild climate and makes life on Earth possible for all creatures.
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Sea level rise is an indicator that our planet is warming. When ice on land, such as mountain glaciers or the ice sheets of Greenland or Antarctica, melts, that water contributes to sea level rise.
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A look at how NASA is dealing with the threat of sea level rise to its coastal infrastructure.
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NASA and its partners announced the renaming of the mission, previously known as Sentinel-6A/Jason-CS.
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