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mikkolagerstedt
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βIf man had no eternal consciousness, if, at the bottom of everything, there were merely a wild seething force producing everything, both large and trifling, in the storm of dark passions, if the bottomless void that nothing can fill underlay all things, what would life be but despair?β
- Albert Camus, quoting Kierkegaard in βSysiphosβ
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When we think about what makes a planet habitable, weβre often talking about water. With abundant water in liquid, gas (vapor) and solid (ice) form, Earth is a highly unusual planet. Almost 70% of our home planetβs surface is covered in water!
But about 97% of Earthβs water is salty β only a tiny amount is freshwater: the stuff humans, pets and plants need to survive.
Water on our planet is constantly moving, and not just geographically. Water shifts phases from ice to water to vapor and back, moving through the planetβs soils and skies as it goes.
Thatβs where our satellites come in.
Look at the Midwestern U.S. this spring, for example. Torrential rain oversaturated the soil and overflowed rivers, which caused severe flooding, seen by Landsat.
Our satellites also tracked a years-long drought in California. Between 2013 and 2014, much of the state turned brown, without visible green.Β Β
Itβs not just rain. Where and when snow falls β and melts β is changing, too. The snow that falls and accumulates on the ground is called snowpack, which eventually melts and feeds rivers used for drinking water and crop irrigation. When the snow doesnβt fall, or melts too early, communities go without water and crops donβt get watered at the right time.
Even when water is available, it can become contaminated by blooms of phytoplankton, like cyanobacteria . Also known as blue-green algae, these organisms can make humans sick if they drink the water. Satellites can help track algae from space, looking for the brightly colored blooms against blue water.
Zooming even farther back, Earthβs blue water is visible from thousands of miles away.Β The water around us makes our planet habitable and makes our planet shine blue among the darkness of space.
Knowing where the water is, and where itβs going, helps people make better decisions about how to manage it. Earthβs climate is changing rapidly, and freshwater is moving as a result. Some places are getting drier and some are getting much, much wetter.Β By predicting droughts and floods and tracking blooms of algae, our view of freshwater around the globe helps people manage their water.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
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12 hours of exposure on the Whirlpool Galaxy revealing the faint dust hiding through out space
via reddit
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Saturn - March 11 2006
Image Credit:Β NASA/JPL-Caltech/CCI/CICLOPS/Kevin M. Gill
Β My ambition is handicapped by laziness. -C. Bukowski Β Β Me gustan las personas desesperadas con mentes rotas y destinos rotos. EstΓ‘n llenos de sorpresas y explosiones. -C. Bukowski. I love cats. Born in the early 80's, raised in the 90's. I like Nature, Autumn, books, landscapes, cold days, cloudy Windy days, space, Science, Paleontology, Biology, Astronomy, History, Social Sciences, Drawing, spending the night watching at the stars, Rick & Morty. I'm a lazy ass.
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