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🔴 LIVE: Tune in as NASA Administrator @SenBillNelson testifies before the Senate Appropriations Committee on our fiscal year 2022 budget request: https://t.co/z1RgZwQkWS
Our Earth-observing missions and instruments on the @Space_Station unravel the complexities of our home planet from a cosmic vantage point. Take a glance at the images of 2020 through the lens of @NASAEarth satellites: https://t.co/D8SOy07E4x
Observing our universe in different kinds of light 🌌
Each of these images combines data from our @ChandraXray observatory with data from other missions. How this "multiwavelength" approach helps astronomers understand objects in space: https://t.co/XLQjmbQxdv
Using satellite data on the landfall of Hurricane Laura, our @NASAEarth Applied Sciences Disasters Program is working to aid in the response. The team creates and distributes information to help response agencies prepare and manage recovery efforts: https://t.co/hyYQiRRpJD
A monstrous cloud of hot material exploding from its surface is most likely what caused the supergiant star Betelgeuse to dim last fall, @NASAHubble/@ESAScience observations suggest.
Our @NASASun spacecraft STEREO witnessed more odd behavior this summer: https://t.co/gvUxgTtOif
Taking advantage of a total lunar eclipse, astronomers using @NASAHubble have detected ozone in our atmosphere.
Why's this important?
🔭 Researchers can now use this new method – and space telescopes – to continue the search for life in our universe: https://t.co/scFEfdz66o
What do you see in Jupiter's clouds? 🐙? ☕ ?
@NASAJuno photographed the giant planet's swirling cloud tops during an April 10 flyby. The image was then processed by citizen scientist Kevin M. Gill: https://t.co/NUTNgL4C5D
Using our @NASAEarth satellites, we've been tracking and monitoring #HurricaneFlorence as it inched across the Carolinas and farther inland. We're using all resources to keep disaster responders informed with the latest information to assist in decisions: https://t.co/fF8dlvvioU
The catalog of images named after French astronomer Charles Messier includes some of the most fascinating astronomical objects that can be observed from Earth’s Northern Hemisphere. Take a closer look at images captured by our @NASAHubble telescope: https://t.co/C3uiTfhts4.
In Greek & Roman mythology, Jupiter drew a veil of clouds around himself to hide his mischief. His wife, the goddess Juno, was able to peer through the clouds & see his true nature, the same way @NASAJuno spacecraft observes planet Jupiter. Take a look: https://t.co/KlnifpNCPW