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  1. Home
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  3. atmosphere
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  5. Page 3
Home»Posts tagged with»atmosphere (Page 3)

Researchers Find New Reason Why Arctic is Warming So Fast

By National Science Foundation on Mar 3, 2020   Science/Education, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Researchers Find New Reason Why Arctic is Warming So Fast

  The Arctic has experienced the warming effects of global climate change faster than any other region on the planet. Scientists at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography have developed a new theory aided by computer simulations and observations that helps explain why this occurs. A team led by Scripps researcher Emma Beer observed the changes taking place […]

Bacteria Feeding on Arctic Algae Blooms can Seed Clouds

By Nanci Bompey American Geophysical Institute on Aug 30, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Bacteria Feeding on Arctic Algae Blooms can Seed Clouds

Photo: This is a 2009 phytoplankton bloom in the Bering Sea. Cloud seed bacteria may feed on phytoplankton. CREDIT: NASA, Jeff Schmaltz, MODIS Rapid Response Team, Goddard Space Flight Center WASHINGTON – New research finds Arctic Ocean currents and storms are moving bacteria from ocean algae blooms into the atmosphere where the particles help clouds […]

Atmospheric Rivers Sometimes Soak Alaska

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Aug 30, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Atmospheric Rivers Sometimes Soak Alaska

Photo: An atmospheric river that transported immense amounts of water vapor from the tropics to Southcentral Alaska in November 2018. NOAA image Nome, August 2019: More than 2 inches of rainfall falls in one day, setting a new record. Thompson Pass, December 2017: 1.7 inches of snow piles up in 10 minutes. Seven feet of […]

New NOAA App Brings Earth and Space Animations to your Phone

By NOAA Research News on Aug 9, 2019   Featured, Science/Education  

New NOAA App Brings Earth and Space Animations to your Phone

  Free Tool Helps Teachers, Students Understand The Earth  An enormous earthquake, the most powerful ever recorded, rocked southern Chile on May 22, 1960 and created a tsunami that raced across the Pacfic Ocean. As giant waves rippled outward, they sped along the shore and bounced back and forth off islands, battering Chile with […]

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