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Earth

Your home. Our mission.

Earth Action

NASA is an exploration agency, and one of our missions is to know our home. We develop novel tools and techniques for understanding how our planet works -- for the benefit of humanity and for insights we need to explore other moons and planets. NASA's Earth Science Division operates more than 20 satellites in orbit, sponsors hundreds of research programs and studies, and funds opportunities to put data to use for societal needs. We develop new ways to observe the oceans, land cover, ice, atmosphere, and life, and we measure how changes in one drive changes in others over the short and long term. While listening to and collaborating with industry leaders, international partners, academic institutions, and other users of our data, we drive innovations and deliver science to help inform decisions that benefit the nation and the world.

Earth Observatory Image of the Day

An Unrelenting Tule Fog
4 min read

The right combination of conditions allowed this distinctive low cloud to form in California’s Central Valley for weeks.

Dec 11, 2025
City Lights Glow Along Moonlit Waters
3 min read

An astronaut photographed moonglint shimmering across the sea surface and the bright clusters of Florida’s cities at night.

Dec 10, 2025
A Hot and Fiery Decade for Kīlauea
6 min read

The volcano in Hawaii is one of the most active in the world, and NASA tech makes it easier for…

Dec 9, 2025

NISAR

Carrying an advanced radar system that will produce a dynamic, three-dimensional view of Earth in unprecedented detail, the NISAR (NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar) satellite was launched from India on July 30, 2025. Jointly developed by NASA and the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), the satellite can detect the movement of land and ice surfaces down to the centimeter. The mission will help protect communities by providing unique, actionable information to decision-makers in a diverse range of areas, including disaster response, infrastructure monitoring, and agricultural management. 

Sensing the Seas

For more than forty years, NASA has found unique ways to study the surface layers of the ocean from the tropics to the poles. With three new missions since 2020 – PACE, SWOT, and Sentinel 6-Michael Freilich – we are now ushering in a new era of ocean studies.

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