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Source: NASA Scientific Visualization Studio


Visit: svs.gsfc.nasa.gov


Articles from this source (6)

NASA Scientific Visualization Studio | Antarctic Sea Ice Maximum, 2023

  2023-09-25 by in NASA Scientific Visualization Studio

Antarctic sea ice maximum extent, September 10 2023 ||

  Tagged under: Oceans | Climate Change | Antarctic


NASA Scientific Visualization Studio | Summer 2023 Record High Global Temperatures

  2023-09-14 by in NASA Scientific Visualization Studio

This 'map shows monthly temperature anomalies measure from 1880 to August 2023 measured with respect to a the baseline period 1951-1980.Versions are provided in both English and Spanish. || GISTEMP_Summer2023_English_2160p30.00899_print.jpg (1024x576) [191.0 KB] || GISTEMP_Summer2023_English_2160p30.00899_searchweb.png (320x180) [74.2 KB] || GISTEMP_Summer2023_English_2160p30.00899_thm.png (80x40) [7.1 KB] || GISTEMP_Summer2023_English_2160p30.mp4 (3840x2160) [106.5 MB] || GISTEMP_Summer2023_Spanish_2160p30.mp4 (3840x2160) [36.2 MB] ||


NASA Scientific Visualization Studio | Shifting Distribution of Land Temperature Anomalies, 1962-2022

  2023-05-31 by in NASA Scientific Visualization Studio

The change in the distribution of land temperature anomalies over the years 1962 to 2022. This version is in Celsius, a Fahrenheit version is also available. ||

  Tagged under: Climate Change


SVS: GISTEMP Climate Spiral

  2022-03-20 (or before) by in NASA Scientific Visualization Studio

  Tagged under: Climate Change


NASA Scientific Visualization Studio | Shifting Distribution of Land Temperature Anomalies, 1951-2020

  2021-04-23 by in NASA Scientific Visualization Studio

The change in the distribution of land temperature anomalies over the years 1951 to 2020 ||

  Tagged under: Climate Change


NASA Scientific Visualization Studio | Ask A Climate Scientist - Lagging CO2

  2013-09-24 by in NASA Scientific Visualization Studio

Is there any merit to the studies that show that historical CO2 levels lag behind temperature, and not lead them?Climate scientist Peter Hildebrand, Director of the Earth Science Division at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, says yes, there's merit to those studies. In the pre-industrial age, the CO2 response to temperature was that the temperature would go up and CO2 would go up. Or if the temperature went down, CO2 would go down. And the reason for that is when the temperature went up, the whole biosphere revved up and emitted CO2, and we had more CO2 in the atmosphere. So we understand that process.In the post-industrial ag...


Related Topics

Antarctic | Climate Change | Oceans

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