Quantcast
Channel: Climate.gov ClimateTech
Browsing all 21 articles
Browse latest View live

Deep Argo: Diving for Answers in the Ocean’s Abyss

Ocean scientists have designed a new aquatic robot that can go where they suspect some of the heat energy from global warming is hiding: in the abyss.

View Article



Science in space: New satellite could bring climate DSCOVRies

In addition to its primary mission of observing space weather, the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite is carrying two instruments that are important to climate science: the NISTAR…

View Article

When will the Tanana River ice break up?

While many of us were wrapped up in March Madness this spring, Alaska residents and people across the globe participated in a different kind of competition.

View Article

Bottled air from all over the world tells story of ozone-depleting gases and...

Some of the chemicals that replaced ozone-harming CFCs are long-lived greenhouse gases. At NOAA's lab in Boulder, Colorado, chemist Steve Montzka leads the effort to monitor the concentration of CFC-…

View Article

NOAA satellites go HD with GOES-R

Providing more timely and accurate information over the western hemisphere, total lightning mapping, and higher resolution images streaming down from space more often, the new GOES satellite marks…

View Article


New tool helps oyster growers prepare for changing ocean chemistry

The oyster hatchery industry on the U.S. West Coast nearly collapsed when they were caught off guard by increasing acidity in the coastal waters. In Maine, an oyster grower is testing whether new…

View Article

Seismic records may help answer if hurricanes have gotten stronger or more...

NOAA-funded researchers have developed a way to estimate hurricane strength using nothing but seismic data used to track earthquakes and volcanoes. The technique may help expand the pre-satellite…

View Article

Adaptable and driven by renewable energy, saildrones voyage into remote waters

With long ranges and adaptive capabilites, saildrones provide researchers with a new tool in their toolbox for collecting data in remote and hard to reach parts of the ocean.

View Article


Meet 5 NOAA buoys that help scientists understand our weather, climate, and...

From algae growth and sea ice to tsunamis, moored ocean buoys are vital to understanding and predicting the ocean.

View Article


Landmark buoys across the tropical Pacific Ocean get a makeover

NOAA's network of moored buoys in the tropical Pacific is getting an upgrade that will help scientists better understand and predict El Niño and La Nina.

View Article

Deep Argo: Diving for Answers in the Ocean’s Abyss

Ocean scientists have designed a new aquatic robot that can go where they suspect some of the heat energy from global warming is hiding: in the abyss.

View Article

Deep Argo: Diving for Answers in the Ocean’s Abyss

Ocean scientists have designed a new aquatic robot that can go where they suspect some of the heat energy from global warming is hiding: in the abyss.

View Article

Science in space: New satellite could bring climate DSCOVRies

In addition to its primary mission of observing space weather, the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite is carrying two instruments that are important to climate science: the NISTAR…

View Article


When will the Tanana River ice break up?

While many of us were wrapped up in March Madness this spring, Alaska residents and people across the globe participated in a different kind of competition.

View Article

Bottled air from all over the world tells story of ozone-depleting gases and...

Some of the chemicals that replaced ozone-harming CFCs are long-lived greenhouse gases. At NOAA's lab in Boulder, Colorado, chemist Steve Montzka leads the effort to monitor the concentration of CFC-…

View Article


NOAA satellites go HD with GOES-R

Providing more timely and accurate information over the western hemisphere, total lightning mapping, and higher resolution images streaming down from space more often, the new GOES satellite marks…

View Article

New tool helps oyster growers prepare for changing ocean chemistry

The oyster hatchery industry on the U.S. West Coast nearly collapsed when they were caught off guard by increasing acidity in the coastal waters. In Maine, an oyster grower is testing whether new…

View Article


Seismic records may help answer if hurricanes have gotten stronger or more...

NOAA-funded researchers have developed a way to estimate hurricane strength using nothing but seismic data used to track earthquakes and volcanoes. The technique may help expand the pre-satellite…

View Article

Adaptable and driven by renewable energy, saildrones voyage into remote waters

With long ranges and adaptive capabilites, saildrones provide researchers with a new tool in their toolbox for collecting data in remote and hard to reach parts of the ocean.

View Article

Meet 5 NOAA buoys that help scientists understand our weather, climate, and...

From algae growth and sea ice to tsunamis, moored ocean buoys are vital to understanding and predicting the ocean.

View Article
Browsing all 21 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images