The Shrinking Aral Sea

The Shrinking Aral Sea

The Aral Sea was once the fourth-largest lake in the world. Fed primarily by snowmelt and precipitation flowing down from faraway mountains, it was a temperate oasis in an arid region. But in the 1960s, the Soviet Union diverted two major rivers to irrigate farmland, cutting off the inland sea from its source. As the Aral Sea dried up, fisheries collapsed, as did the communities that depended on them. The remaining water supply became increasingly salty and polluted with runoff from agricultural plots. Loss of the Aral Sea’s water influenced regional climate, making the winters even colder and the summers much hotter.

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While seasonal rains still bring water to the Aral Sea, the lake is roughly one-tenth of its original size. These satellite images show how the Aral Sea and its surrounding landscape has changed over the past few decades.

For more details about these images, read the full stories here: https://go.nasa.gov/2PqJ1ot

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

More Posts from Ocrim1967 and Others

6 years ago
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)
If The Moon Were Replaced With Some Of Our Planets (at Night)

If the Moon were replaced with some of our planets (at night)

Image credit: yeti dynamics

7 years ago
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky
ESO’s La Silla Observatory Over The Night Sky

ESO’s La Silla Observatory over the night sky

Image credit: ESO

6 years ago

World Teacher Appreciation Day!

On #WorldTeachersDay, we are recognizing our two current astronauts who are former classroom teachers, Joe Acaba and Ricky Arnold, as well as honoring teachers everywhere. What better way to celebrate than by learning from teachers who are literally out-of-this-world!

During the past Year of Education on Station, astronauts connected with more than 175,000 students and 40,000 teachers during live Q & A sessions. 

Let’s take a look at some of the questions those students asked:

The view from space is supposed to be amazing. Is it really that great and could you explain? 

Taking a look at our home planet from the International Space Station is one of the most fascinating things to see! The views and vistas are unforgettable, and you want to take everyone you know to the Cupola (window) to experience this. Want to see what the view is like? Check out earthkam to learn more.

What kind of experiments do you do in space?

There are several experiments that take place on a continuous basis aboard the orbiting laboratory - anything from combustion to life sciences to horticulture. Several organizations around the world have had the opportunity to test their experiments 250 miles off the surface of the Earth. 

What is the most overlooked attribute of an astronaut?

If you are a good listener and follower, you can be successful on the space station. As you work with your team, you can rely on each other’s strengths to achieve a common goal. Each astronaut needs to have expeditionary skills to be successful. Check out some of those skills here. 

Are you able to grow any plants on the International Space Station?

Nothing excites Serena Auñón-Chancellor more than seeing a living, green plant on the International Space Station. She can’t wait to use some of the lettuce harvest to top her next burger! Learn more about the plants that Serena sees on station here. 

What food are you growing on the ISS and which tastes the best? 

While aboard the International Space Station, taste buds may not react the same way as they do on earth but the astronauts have access to a variety of snacks and meals. They have also grown 12 variants of lettuce that they have had the opportunity to taste.

Learn more about Joe Acaba, Ricky Arnold, and the Year of Education on Station.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

5 years ago

When the Moon's Shadow Falls on Earth

On July 2, 2019, a total solar eclipse will pass over parts of Argentina and Chile.

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Solar eclipses happen when the Moon passes directly between the Sun and Earth, casting its shadow onto Earth’s surface. Because the Moon’s orbit isn’t perfectly in line with the Sun and Earth, its shadow usually passes above or below Earth. But when it lines up just right, we get a solar eclipse!

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People in the inner part of the Moon’s shadow — the umbra — have the chance to witness a total solar eclipse, while those in the outer part of the shadow — the penumbra — experience a partial solar eclipse.

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The path of the total solar eclipse stretches across parts of Chile and Argentina. People outside this path may see a partial eclipse or no eclipse at all.

During a total solar eclipse, the Moon blocks out the Sun’s bright face, revealing its comparatively faint outer atmosphere, the corona. The corona is a dynamic region that is thought to hold the answers to questions about the fundamental physics of the Sun — like why the corona is so much hotter than the Sun’s surface and how the Sun’s constant outflow of material, the solar wind, is accelerated to such high speeds. 

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Image Credit: Miloslav Druckmüller, Peter Aniol, Shadia Habbal

Our Parker Solar Probe and the upcoming Solar Orbiter mission from the European Space Agency are exploring these questions by flying through the corona itself and taking unprecedented measurements of the conditions there. Plus, our newly-chosen PUNCH mission will create tiny, artificial eclipses in front of its cameras — using an instrument called a coronagraph — to study structures in the Sun’s corona and examine how it generates the solar wind.

Watching the eclipse

It’s never safe to look directly at the uneclipsed or partially eclipsed Sun – so you’ll need special solar viewing glasses or an indirect viewing method, like pinhole projection, to watch the eclipse. 

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For people in the path of totality, there will be a few brief moments when it is safe to look directly at the eclipse. Only once the Moon has completely covered the Sun and there is no sunlight shining is it safe to look at the eclipse. Make sure you put your eclipse glasses back on or return to indirect viewing before the first flash of sunlight appears around the Moon’s edge.

No matter where you are, you can watch the eclipse online! The Exploratorium will be streaming live views of the eclipse with commentary in both English and Spanish starting at 4 p.m. EDT / 1 p.m. PDT on July 2. Watch with us at nasa.gov/live!

Para más información e actualizaciones en español acerca del eclipse, sigue a @NASA_es en Twitter o vea esta hoja de hechos.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

6 years ago

Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At

Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
Hilarious Animal Snapchats That Are Impossible Not To Laugh At
5 years ago
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen
Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen

Yes, The Apollo Moon Landings Really Did Happen

“2.) We have extensive photographic and video evidence from the Apollo missions themselves. How could the lunar module have ascended back off of the surface and returned the astronauts back to the orbiting module which would take them back to Earth? Exactly like the video above shows, from direct Apollo 17 footage. The hypergolic propellant system isn’t based off of a single explosion, but rather a constant thrust of ~16,000 Newtons that was steadily delivered over a timespan of about 5 minutes. There’s no exhaust trail because there’s no lunar atmosphere, but you can track the spacecraft’s accelerated motion for yourself with even basic modern software.”

We’re less than a month away from the official 50th anniversary of the first crewed Moon landing, and there are all sorts of good reasons to celebrate. But for most of us alive today, the final Apollo mission occurred before we were born. Perhaps because of this distance between then and now, there are a great many people who don’t believe that the lunar landings ever occurred. While you might (rightfully) dismiss this position as an uninformed conspiracy, you can also immediately point to a slew of scientific evidence to demonstrate that yes, we did go to the Moon, and here is an enormous suite of data to back that up. From thousands of photographs to suites of instruments and scientific data to an examination of the landing sites today, everything lines up.

Come get the evidence for yourself, and don’t let someone’s conspiracy-minded ravings lead you astray.

6 years ago
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration
FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration

FOR SALE: Mobile &Web Illustration

5 years ago

5 Ways the Moon Landing Changed Life on Earth

When Neil Armstrong took his first steps on the Moon 50 years ago, he famously said “that’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.” He was referring to the historic milestone of exploring beyond our own planet — but there’s also another way to think about that giant leap: the massive effort to develop technologies to safely reach, walk on the Moon and return home led to countless innovations that have improved life on Earth.

Armstrong took one small step on the lunar surface, but the Moon landing led to a giant leap forward in innovations for humanity.

Here are five examples of technology developed for the Apollo program that we’re still using today:

1. Food Safety Standards

As soon as we started planning to send astronauts into space, we faced the problem of what to feed them — and how to ensure the food was safe to eat. Can you imagine getting food poisoning on a spacecraft, hundreds of thousands of miles from home?

We teamed up with a familiar name in food production: the Pillsbury Company. The company soon realized that existing quality control methods were lacking. There was no way to be certain, without extensive testing that destroyed the sample, that the food was free of bacteria and toxins.

Pillsbury revamped its entire food-safety process, creating what became the Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point system. Its aim was to prevent food safety problems from occurring, rather than catch them after the fact. They managed this by analyzing and controlling every link in the chain, from the raw materials to the processing equipment to the people handling the food.

Today, this is one of the space program’s most far-reaching spinoffs. Beyond keeping the astronaut food supply safe, the Hazard Analysis and Critical Point system has also been adopted around the world — and likely reduced the risk of bacteria and toxins in your local grocery store. 

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2. Digital Controls for Air and Spacecraft

The Apollo spacecraft was revolutionary for many reasons. Did you know it was the first vehicle to be controlled by a digital computer? Instead of pushrods and cables that pilots manually adjusted to manipulate the spacecraft, Apollo’s computer sent signals to actuators at the flick of a switch.

Besides being physically lighter and less cumbersome, the switch to a digital control system enabled storing large quantities of data and programming maneuvers with complex software.

Before Apollo, there were no digital computers to control airplanes either. Working together with the Navy and Draper Laboratory, we adapted the Apollo digital flight computer to work on airplanes. Today, whatever airline you might be flying, the pilot is controlling it digitally, based on the technology first developed for the flight to the Moon.

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3. Earthquake-ready Shock Absorbers

A shock absorber descended from Apollo-era dampers and computers saves lives by stabilizing buildings during earthquakes.

Apollo’s Saturn V rockets had to stay connected to the fueling tubes on the launchpad up to the very last second. That presented a challenge: how to safely move those tubes out of the way once liftoff began. Given how fast they were moving, how could we ensure they wouldn’t bounce back and smash into the vehicle?

We contracted with Taylor Devices, Inc. to develop dampers to cushion the shock, forcing the company to push conventional shock isolation technology to the limit.

Shortly after, we went back to the company for a hydraulics-based high-speed computer. For that challenge, the company came up with fluidic dampers—filled with compressible fluid—that worked even better. We later applied the same technology on the Space Shuttle’s launchpad.

The company has since adapted these fluidic dampers for buildings and bridges to help them survive earthquakes. Today, they are successfully protecting structures in some of the most quake-prone areas of the world, including Tokyo, San Francisco and Taiwan.

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4. Insulation for Space

We’ve all seen runners draped in silvery “space blankets” at the end of marathons, but did you know the material, called radiant barrier insulation, was actually created for space?

Temperatures outside of Earth’s atmosphere can fluctuate widely, from hundreds of degrees below to hundreds above zero. To better protect our astronauts, during the Apollo program we invented a new kind of effective, lightweight insulation.

We developed a method of coating mylar with a thin layer of vaporized metal particles. The resulting material had the look and weight of thin cellophane packaging, but was extremely reflective—and pound-for-pound, better than anything else available.

Today the material is still used to protect astronauts, as well as sensitive electronics, in nearly all of our missions. But it has also found countless uses on the ground, from space blankets for athletes to energy-saving insulation for buildings. It also protects essential components of MRI machines used in medicine and much, much more.

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Image courtesy of the U.S. Marines

5. Healthcare Monitors

Patients in hospitals are hooked up to sensors that send important health data to the nurse’s station and beyond — which means when an alarm goes off, the right people come running to help.

This technology saves lives every day. But before it reached the ICU, it was invented for something even more extraordinary: sending health data from space down to Earth.

When the Apollo astronauts flew to the Moon, they were hooked up to a system of sensors that sent real-time information on their blood pressure, body temperature, heart rate and more to a team on the ground.

The system was developed for us by Spacelabs Healthcare, which quickly adapted it for hospital monitoring. The company now has telemetric monitoring equipment in nearly every hospital around the world, and it is expanding further, so at-risk patients and their doctors can keep track of their health even outside the hospital.

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Only a few people have ever walked on the Moon, but the benefits of the Apollo program for the rest of us continue to ripple widely.

In the years since, we have continued to create innovations that have saved lives, helped the environment, and advanced all kinds of technology.

Now we’re going forward to the Moon with the Artemis program and on to Mars — and building ever more cutting-edge technologies to get us there. As with the many spinoffs from the Apollo era, these innovations will transform our lives for generations to come.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.

4 years ago
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?
Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = Mc²?

Ask Ethan: Is There A Fundamental Reason Why E = mc²?

“Einstein’s equation is amazingly elegant. But is its simplicity real or only apparent? Does E = mc² derive directly from an inherent equivalence between any mass’s energy and the square of the speed of light (which seems like a marvelous coincidence)? Or does the equation only exist because its terms are defined in a (conveniently) particular way?”

Quite arguably, Einstein’s E = mc² is the most famous equation in the entire world. And yet, it isn’t obvious why it had to be this way! Could there have been some other speed besides the speed of light that converts mass to energy? Could there have been a multiplicative constant out in front besides “1” to give the right answer? No, no there couldn’t. If energy and momentum are conserved, and particles have the energies and momenta that they do, there’s no other option. 

Come learn, at last, why E = mc², and why simply no other alternative will do.

6 years ago

Our Favorite Valentines Throughout the Universe

Today is Valentine’s Day. What better way to express that you love someone than with an intergalactic love gram? Check out some of our favorites and send them to all of your cosmic companions:

Your love is galactic

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The Hubble Space Telescope revolutionized nearly all areas of astronomical research — and captured some truly lovely images. Here, a pair of intersecting galaxies swirl into the shape of a rose as a result of gravitational tidal pull. What type of roses are you getting for your love — red or galactic?

I think you’re n{ice}

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IceBridge is the largest airborne survey of Earth’s polar ice ever flown. It captures 3-D views of Arctic and Antarctic ice sheets, ice shelves and sea ice. This lovely heart-shaped glacier feature was discovered in northwest Greenland during an IceBridge flight in 2017. Which of your lover’s features would you say are the coolest?

You’re absolutely magnetic

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Even though we can’t see them, magnetic fields are all around us. One of the solar system’s largest magnetospheres belongs to Jupiter. Right now, our Juno spacecraft is providing scientists with their first glimpses of this unseen force. Is your attraction to your loved one magnetic?

You’re MARS-velous

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This heart-shaped feature on the Martian landscape was captured by our Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. It was created by a small impact crater that blew darker material on the surface away. What impact has your loved one had on you?

I <3 you

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From three billion miles away, Pluto sent a “love note” back to Earth, via our New Horizons spacecraft. This stunning image of Pluto’s “heart” shows one of the world’s most dominant features, estimated to be 1,000 miles (1,600 km) across at its widest point. Will you pass this love note on to someone special in your life?

Light of my life

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Our Solar Dynamics Observatory keeps an eye on our closest star that brings energy to you and your love. The observatory helps us understand where the Sun’s energy comes from, how the inside of the Sun works, how energy is stored and released in the Sun’s atmosphere and much more. Who would you say is your ray of sunshine?

Do any of these cosmic phenomena remind you of someone in your universe? Download these cards here to send to all the stars in your sky.

Want something from the Red Planet to match your bouquet of red roses? Here is our collection of Martian Valentines.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

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