Geodesy and Geophysics Laboratory
 

Upcoming Events

Tuesday, June 17, 2025
12:00 PM - 01:00 PM
SED Director’s Seminar
Please join us for the SED Director’s Seminar hosted by the Exoplanets and Stellar Astrophysics Laboratory, Code 667!

Speaker: Ken Carpenter/667
Topic:The Hubble Space Telescope at 35: Highlights and Future Focus

Speaker: Dana R. Louie/Catholic University Title: JWST-TST DREAMS: A Precise Water Abundance for Hot Jupiter WASP-17b from the NIRISS SOSS Transmission Spectrum

Speaker: Keighley Rockcliffe/UMBC
Topic: Exoplanet characterization: atmospheric escape

Read more about this event
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
02:00 PM - 03:00 PM
Biospheric Sciences Brown Bag Seminar
Effects of Land-Atmosphere Interactions on Convective Clouds and their Evolution
Aryeh Jacob Drager, Environmental Science and Technologies Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory
Read more about this event
Tuesday, June 24, 2025
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM
GMAO Seminar Series

Sampa Das, NASA Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics Laboratory
Read more about this event

Featured Videos

The Geocenter of the Earth Is Changing

At the foundation of virtually all airborne, space-based and ground-based Earth observations is the Terrestrial Reference Frame (TRF). The TRF relies on an accurate calculation of the geocenter of the Earth. However, one complication is that the geocenter is constantly changing with respect to the Earth’s surface.

USFS/GEDI Old Growth Forest Visualization

This visualization begins with a view of USFS Forest Inventory and Analysis (FIA) plot locations (orange dots) across the continental US. GEDI vegetation height data then draws on dynamically, showing how data from both the USFS and NASA can be used together to increase spatial coverage.

NASA Sees Tides Under Ocean’s Surface

Internal tides, or internal waves, can reach hundreds of feet underneath the ocean surface, but might only be a few inches high on the surface. Even though they’re underwater, NASA can see these tides from satellites. They provide oceanographers with a unique way to map and study the much larger internal water motion.

NASA Explores Earth's Magnetic 'Dent'

Earth’s magnetic field acts like a protective shield around the planet, repelling and trapping charged particles from the Sun. But over South America and the southern Atlantic Ocean, an unusually weak spot in the field – called the South Atlantic Anomaly, or SAA – allows these particles to dip closer to the surface than normal.

 

Local News

 

We are thrilled to announce the selection of Dr. Richard Ray as the 2025 William Nordberg Memorial Award for Earth Scienc...

Thursday, October 03, 2024