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Earth Science at Work

NASA Earth Sciencehelps Americans respond to challenges and societal needs — such as wildland fires, hurricanes, and water supplies for farming — by putting actionable satellite information into the hands of decisionmakers. NASA conceives, builds, and flies cutting-edge satellites and instruments; harvests data from those tools and from commercial partners; combines it with expert insights and the world’s most advanced models — all to advance solutions for monitoring, prediction, and management.

Why it matters

Using the power of space-based observations, innovative technologies, engineering, science, and partnerships, NASA can offer a comprehensive, digital view of Earth as a system. NASA works across commercial and industrial sectors and federal and international agencies to:

Featured Video

NASA Earth: Powering America's Future

Did you know the very same cutting-edge technology NASA uses to study other planets is exactly what we use to study our own?

From the ground, air, and skies, NASA gathers information crucial to life here on Earth, and we build instruments and technologies and programs that equip the US to meet critical, real-world challenges.

Watch on YouTube

Earth Science at Work,
a white paper

By 2030, the potential economic value of EO (Earth observations) could exceed $700 billion globally...better data can inform decision-making, optimize solutions and enable innovation.

Amplifying the Global Value of Earth Observation

Amplifying the Global Value of Earth Observation

World Economic Forum report

What We Do

  • NASA's research and data provide a competitive advantage to American businesses and support the U.S. economy.

    Mappingrare Earth minerals for use in domestic, technology-dominant industries such as telecommunications, energy generation, and aerospace.

    AidingU.S. agriculture with continuous measurements of water resources, crop health, and global production that inform business decisions, improve farm and ranch efficiency, and reduce input costs, resulting in a positive impact from the commodity-trading floor to the grocery store.

    A farmer is tending his crops, a miner explores a deposit, an industrial harvester is shown in the fields, a large dump truck carries rock at a mine.
    In FY24, NASA’s Earth science data was downloaded by more than8.3 million distinct users from a wide variety of fields and industries.
    NASA, BLM, USGS/Yolanda Fong-Sam
  • NASA Earth supports national security with valuable information and tools.

    Gathering data and establishing parameters that underpin the position, navigation, and timing accuracy of satellites and GPS.

    Providing data needed to forecast extreme events like floods -- through the Global HydroIntelligence System.

    Enhancing situational awareness of ice cover and other conditions around Arctic seas.

    Supplying land surface monitoring capabilities through the Land Information System.

    Providing sea level data applicable to U.S. coastal military installations and operations around the world.

    This map shows a pan-Arctic view of nighttime lights and places where the intensity of artificial lights has increased (yellow), decreased (purple), or stayed the same (green).
    Satellite observations at night indicate that oil, gas, and mining have expanded across Earth’s northern latitudes.

Data is the key. If we can measure it, we can quantify it, we can solve it.

Dwane Roth

Dwane Roth

Farmer and OpenET Data User, Finney County, Kansas

  • NASA is improving the nation’s ability to forecast and respond to severe storms, droughts, wildland fires, and other natural hazards.

    Offeringnear real-time data products, early warning tools, and disaster mapping portals.

    Developing an advancedlandslide forecast model. 

    Improving our understanding of hurricanes and sharing those insights and tools with NOAA’s National Hurricane Center and the Joint Typhoon Warning Center

    Working with the U.S. Forest Service and other agencies to provide key observations of conditions before, during, and afterwildland fires - such as estimating fuel loads and soil moisture.

    A selection of four images showing a volcano erupting, flooded streets in Vermont, a hurricane seen from space, and fires burning a hillside.
    A selection of four images showing a volcano erupting, flooded streets in Vermont, a hurricane seen from space, and fires burning a hillside.
    NASA Earth Science Division
  • Our data supports decision-making that affects human health and quality of life.

    Satellite measurements of temperature, humidity, and precipitation help predictoutbreaks of mosquito-borne illnesses.

    Satellite observations and models helpassess freshwater resources from the surface through the root zone to the deep aquifer.

    A map indicating various losses of groundwater paired with an examination of mosquitos in a laboratory dish.
    Observations of the amount of freshwater stored on land and underground (left) contribute to our understanding of how water availability puts a strain on farmers and communities, potentially leading to famine, conflicts, poverty, and an increased risk of disease, including those transmitted by mosquitoes (right).
    NASA Earth Observatory, CDC

NASA's consistent sea level rise data is the best way and the best tool for us to make sure that we spend our money carefully and wisely so that the future generations get to enjoy our beaches and bays and rivers just as much as I did.

Casi Callaway

Casi Callaway

Chief Resilience Officer, City of Mobile, Alabama

Five puzzle pieces representing the interconnected nature of the Earth Science Division's elements: Technology, Flight, Research and Analysis, Data and Modeling, and Earth Action
NASA is uniquely positioned to take scientific and societal questions from conception to public utility. We develop and fund technological leaps, build and launch the satellites and instruments, gather and disseminate the data, analyze the findings, and work with commercial, industry, academic, and government partners to serve societal needs.
NASA Earth Science Division

Studying Earth from Space

Since the 1960s, we have been observing our own planet because it is the one we need to know best. NASA applies ingenuity and expertise gained from decades of planetary and deep-space exploration to the study of our home planet.

NASA Research and Data in Action

Article
5 min read

OpenET Study Helps Water Managers and Farmers Put NASA Data to Work

Article
4 min read

NASA and Forest Service Use Balloon to Help Firefighters Communicate

Article
6 min read

NASA Flights Map Critical Minerals from Skies Above Western US

Article
4 min read

NASA Data Helps Protect US Embassy Staff from Polluted Air

Article
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NASA Laser Reflecting Instruments to Help Pinpoint Earth Measurements

Article
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NASA, Pacific Disaster Center Increase Landslide Hazard Awareness

Article
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NASA Data Helps Bangladeshi Farmers Save Water, Money, Energy

Article
5 min read

Cutting-Edge Satellite Tracks Lake Water Levels in Ohio River Basin

Learn more

Earth Science at Work,
a white paper

Earth Science to Action Strategy

Within a decade, we will advance and integrate Earth science knowledge to empower humanity to create a more resilient world.


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