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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.

Recent News and Articles

4 min read

US-Indian Space Mission Maps Extreme Subsidence in Mexico City

2 min read

NASA Science Supports Golden Eagles on the Move

An aircraft takes off for a mission.

NASA’s C-20A Flights Advance Understanding of Earthquake Dynamics

Two people walk in front of an airplane sitting on a snow covered runway. at sunset.

NASA Aircraft Studies Tiny Particles with Atmospheric Impacts

Earth Observatory Image of the Day

New Eruption in the Bismarck Sea
5 min read

Satellite imagery shows a surge of new volcanic activity in the ocean near Papua New Guinea.

May 21, 2026
Fire Chars Santa Rosa Island
2 min read

The blaze spread across the southern side of the second-largest island in California’s Channel Islands National Park.

May 20, 2026
Farming in Ancient Lake Agassiz
3 min read

The glacial lake left a layer of silt and clay in southeastern Manitoba, creating fertile farmland that was divided during…

May 19, 2026

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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