Look at how drop in fossils fuel emissions from coronavirus response changed earth's atmosphere from Mar - Apr
Computer based models and datasets and sensors located on our planet's surface that continuously monitor the environment , allowing scientists to observe the growing effects of the pandemic. NASA has started up brand new projects to specifically track and study how covid-19 is changing our planet's atmosphere.
To study these changes, researchers are working with data from instrument including OMI, a Dutch Finnish instrument aboard NASA Aura satellite and the TROPOMI on the ESA sentinel-5p satellite.
Since the earlier days of the pandemic,satellites have been showing changes in nitrogen dioxide levels and significant changes spotted over countries like Italy and China.
Joanna joiner and Bryan Duncan, researchers at NASA Goddard space flights center in Maryland, have been using OMI's data, to continue to took new and better comparisms to show how gases in Earth's atmosphere are changing.
While all NASA employees whose work is not mission essential are working remotely, this hasn't stopped the agency from making progress with these efforts, joiner, Duncan and other NASA researchers continue to monitor earth atmosphere using satellite data.
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Since the earlier days of the pandemic,satellites have been showing changes in nitrogen dioxide levels and significant changes spotted over countries like Italy and China.
Joanna joiner and Bryan Duncan, researchers at NASA Goddard space flights center in Maryland, have been using OMI's data, to continue to took new and better comparisms to show how gases in Earth's atmosphere are changing.
While all NASA employees whose work is not mission essential are working remotely, this hasn't stopped the agency from making progress with these efforts, joiner, Duncan and other NASA researchers continue to monitor earth atmosphere using satellite data.
Join for more astronomy fun
On Instagram
Instagram.com/jabarspacenews
twitter.com/jabarspacenews
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