Congressional Democrats and Republicans have waged repeated battles over funding for
earth science research at NASA, with Democrats wanting more and Republicans less.
Not exact matches
Jonathan Nichols, a Lamont - Doherty
Earth Observatory
Research Professor at Columbia University who specializes in climate science, focuses his research on whether warming temperatures will cause Arctic peat bogs to decay or expand due to improved growing conditions, a question that could alter the levels of carbon the bogs have long a
Research Professor
at Columbia University who specializes in climate
science, focuses his
research on whether warming temperatures will cause Arctic peat bogs to decay or expand due to improved growing conditions, a question that could alter the levels of carbon the bogs have long a
research on whether warming temperatures will cause Arctic peat bogs to decay or expand due to improved growing conditions, a question that could alter the levels of carbon the bogs have long absorbed.
Murali Haran, a professor in the department of statistics
at Penn State University; Won Chang, an assistant professor in the department of mathematical
sciences at the University of Cincinnati; Klaus Keller, a professor in the department of geosciences and director of sustainable climate risk management
at Penn State University; Rob Nicholas, a
research associate
at Earth and Environmental Systems Institute
at Penn State University; and David Pollard, a senior scientist
at Earth and Environmental Systems Institute
at Penn State University detail how parameters and initial values drive an ice sheet model, whose output describes the behavior of the ice sheet through time.
«For example, [measuring] chlorophyll a will give you information about how much biological activity is going on, and eventually more information about the concentration of carbon dioxide within the ocean and the atmosphere,» said Yoshihisa Shirayama, executive director of
research at the Japan Agency for Marine -
Earth Science and Technology in Tokyo.
Smitsonian Institution Programs Summer Archeology Programs Connected with DC Universities [Program for Deaf Students] Drinking Water Quality
Research Center, Miami, FL [proposal for outreach to disabled students] Museum of
Science and Industry, IL Chicago Schools Cooperative Museum Program, IL Recreational Faculties for the Handicapped
at Rend Lake, IL SELPH Material Lawrence Hall King Report on Survey of the Special Educational Programs of Members of the Association of
Science Technology Centers University of Kentucky Outdoor Education for Handicapped Project Directory of OOPS Programs Maryland
Science Center, Baltimore, MD [notes on interview] ABCD Collaboration
Science Program Non-Mainstreamed Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA Technical Education
Research Center Camp Happy Hollow, Mayrille, MI Squam Lakes
Science Center, NH
Science Enrichment Program Opened to Handicapped Students NY League of Hard of Hearing, NY Center of
Science and Industry, OH Carnegie Museum, Pittsburg, PA Pacoma Environmental Education Center, PA Roanoke Valley
Science Museum, VA Fairfax County Public Schools, VA US Geological Survey
Earth Science Program, WI ERIC - CRESS Info on Outdoor Ed -
Science Programs National Council for Therapy and Rehabilitation through Horticulture Environments for the Able and Disabled Nature Study - A Journal of Education and Interpretation OOPS Out of School
Science Proposal and Drafts Original Newspaper Article, 1980 - 1981 OOPS Out of School
Science Proposal and Drafts II, 1980 - 1981
The paper, published online yesterday in the journal
Science, was co-authored by Jessie Creamean, a postdoctoral associate
at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's
Earth System
Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colo., and Kaitlyn Suski, a graduate student
at the University of California, San Diego.
Carmala Garzione, a professor of
earth and environmental sciences at the University of Rochester, and Junsheng Nie, a visiting research associate at the University, surveyed sediment samples from the northern Tibetan Plateau's Qaidam Basin and were able to construct paleoclimate cycle records from the late Miocene epoch of Earth's history, which lasted from approximately 11 to 5.3 million years
earth and environmental
sciences at the University of Rochester, and Junsheng Nie, a visiting
research associate
at the University, surveyed sediment samples from the northern Tibetan Plateau's Qaidam Basin and were able to construct paleoclimate cycle records from the late Miocene epoch of
Earth's history, which lasted from approximately 11 to 5.3 million years
Earth's history, which lasted from approximately 11 to 5.3 million years ago.
«It was important to bring microchemistry into the debate, because discussion has been going on for years over whether these structures were just fossilized bacteria or specific bodies where melanin is concentrated,» said Roger Summons, the Schlumberger Professor of
Earth Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who was not involved in the
research.
Also
at the conference Tuesday, a major alliance of
science,
research and United Nations bodies launched a 10 - year initiative — Future Earth Research for Global Sustainability — to commence next year to coordinate scientific research into the major social and environmental challenges from climate change as they emerge over comin
research and United Nations bodies launched a 10 - year initiative — Future
Earth Research for Global Sustainability — to commence next year to coordinate scientific research into the major social and environmental challenges from climate change as they emerge over comin
Research for Global Sustainability — to commence next year to coordinate scientific
research into the major social and environmental challenges from climate change as they emerge over comin
research into the major social and environmental challenges from climate change as they emerge over coming years.
An increasing body of
research reveals that these weather events can be linked to loss of sea ice in the Arctic, said Charles Greene, professor of
earth and atmospheric
sciences at Cornell University, who contributed to the article.
The proposal also calls for deep cuts to the
research programs
at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and a 5 % cut to NASA's
earth science budget.
A recent study led by the International Institute for Carbon - Neutral Energy
Research (I2CNER)
at Kyushu University in Japan, and published in
Earth and Planetary
Science Letters, now sheds new light on this stress build - up in tectonic plates.
A
research group comprising Project Researcher Yusuke Yamashita, Assistant Professor Tomoaki Yamada, Professor Masanao Shinohara and Professor Kazushige Obara at the University of Tokyo Earthquake Research Institute and researchers at Kyushu University, Kagoshima University, Nagasaki University, and the National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention, carried out ocean bottom seismological observation using 12 ocean bottom seismometers installed on the seafloor of Hyuga - nada from April to Ju
research group comprising Project Researcher Yusuke Yamashita, Assistant Professor Tomoaki Yamada, Professor Masanao Shinohara and Professor Kazushige Obara
at the University of Tokyo Earthquake
Research Institute and researchers at Kyushu University, Kagoshima University, Nagasaki University, and the National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention, carried out ocean bottom seismological observation using 12 ocean bottom seismometers installed on the seafloor of Hyuga - nada from April to Ju
Research Institute and researchers
at Kyushu University, Kagoshima University, Nagasaki University, and the National
Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Prevention, carried out ocean bottom seismological observation using 12 ocean bottom seismometers installed on the seafloor of Hyuga - nada from April to Ju
Research Institute for
Earth Science and Disaster Prevention, carried out ocean bottom seismological observation using 12 ocean bottom seismometers installed on the seafloor of Hyuga - nada from April to July 2013.
J. Casey Moore, a
research professor of
Earth sciences at UCSC and coauthor of the Chester et al. paper, said he suspects the clay layer observed in the Tohoku fault zone may play an important role in other fault zones.
New
research published today in Nature Geoscience by Richard Zeebe, professor
at the University of Hawai'i — Mānoa School of Ocean and
Earth Science and Technology (SOEST), and colleagues looks
at changes of
Earth's temperature and atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) since the end of the age of the dinosaurs.
But a number of federal
research programs and projects remain in Trump's cross hairs, including five of NASA's
Earth science missions and various
research, including on climate or environmental
science,
at the EPA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Geological Survey.
UCSC
research scientist Patrick Fulton was on board the
research vessel Kairei, operated by the Japan Agency for Marine -
Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), for the retrieval of the string of pressure and temperature sensors that was installed across the fault zone
at about 800 meters beneath the seafloor.
The
research, led by Daniel Giammar, the Walter E. Browne Professor of Environmental Engineering in the School of Engineering & Applied
Science, was conducted in collaboration with researchers
at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Philip Skemer, associate professor of
earth and planetary
sciences in Arts &
Sciences at Washington University.
For this
research project, Strausfeld teamed up with Gengo Tanaka of the Japan Agency for Marine -
Earth Science and Technology in Yokosuka, Japan; Xianguang Hou, director of the Yunnan Key Laboratory for Paleobiology
at Yunnan University in Kunming, China, and his colleague Xiaoya Ma who is presently working with Gregory Edgecombe in the paleontology department of the Natural History Museum, London.
In addition to Fitzgerald, the paper was co-authored by Sarah Roeske, a
research scientist
at the University of California, Davis; Jeff Benowitz, a
research scientist
at the Geophysical Institute
at the University of Alaska Fairbanks; Steven Riccio and Stephanie Perry, graduate students in
Earth Sciences at Syracuse; and Phillip Armstrong, professor and chair of geological
sciences at California State University, Fullerton.
«We compared many different coastal ecosystems and have made a clear case for including coastal wetlands in discussions about greenhouse gas mitigation,» said Ariana Sutton - Grier, an assistant
research scientist
at UMD's
Earth System
Science Interdisciplinary Center and a co-lead author of the
research paper.
The proposal also calls for deep cuts to the
research programs
at the Environmental Protection Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and a 5 % cut to NASA's
earth science budget.
In addition to Trowbridge and Melosh, the
research team includes Jordan Steckloff, who was a graduate student
at Purdue the time of the
research, and Andy Freed, a Purdue professor of
earth, atmospheric and planetary
sciences.
Co-authors include Jonathan Aurnou, professor of planetary
science and geophysics in UCLA's Department of
Earth, Planetary and Space Sciences, and Johannes Wicht, a
research scientist at Germany's Max Planck Institute for Solar System R
research scientist
at Germany's Max Planck Institute for Solar System
ResearchResearch.
John Cushman, Purdue University distinguished professor of
earth, atmospheric and planetary
science and a professor of mathematics, presented the
research findings «Redox reactions in immiscible - fluids in porous media — membraneless battery applications»
at the recent International Society for Porous Media 9th International Conference in Rotterdam, Netherlands.
Dust will affect climate and,
at the same time, climate change will affect dust,» said lead author Hongbin Yu, an associate
research scientist
at the
Earth System
Science Interdisciplinary Center (ESSIC), a joint center of the University of Maryland and NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.
«The question for many years was what gas produced these sorts of eruptions on the Moon,» said Alberto Saal, associate professor of
earth, environmental, and planetary
sciences at Brown and corresponding author of the new
research.
Study co-author Katy Sheen, a Postdoctoral
Research Fellow from Ocean and
Earth Science at the University of Southampton, says: «These findings will help us to understand the processes that drive the ocean circulation and mixing so that we can better predict how our
Earth system will respond to the increased levels of carbon dioxide that we have released into the atmosphere.»
«Micro-scale 3D models are an important tool for many areas of
science, but for most micro or nano - scale objects only a portion of the object can be seen in the field of view,» says Gopala Mulukutla, a
research scientist in the Institute for the Study of
Earth, Oceans and Space
at UNH and the study's lead author.
«You have closer communication than ever among the global
science community now,» says Robin E. Bell, a polar
research scientist
at the Lamont - Doherty
Earth Observatory of Columbia University.
Lead author of the study, Dr Caroline Eakin,
Research Fellow in Ocean and
Earth Science at the University of Southampton, said: «The process of consuming old seafloor
at subduction zones, where great slabs of oceanic material are swallowed up, drives circulation in the
Earth's interior and keeps the planet going strong.
Dr Robert Fear from the University of Southampton (formerly
at the University of Leicester, where much of the
research took place), and lead author of the paper published in
Science this week, says: «Previously it was unclear whether this hot plasma was a result of direct solar wind entry through the lobes of the magnetosphere, or if the plasma is somehow related to the plasma sheet on the night side of
Earth.
NSF - funded researchers
at George Mason University are combining citizen
science and basic
research to study radio wave propagation as the moon blocks the sun, which will cause a sudden change in the
Earth's ionosphere.
«Most of the previous
research of the past climate in this region is based on detailed studies of specific sites,» said the lead author Jessica Oster, assistant professor of
earth and environmental
sciences at Vanderbilt University.
«This innovative gas separation platform provides large surface areas while eliminating a number of operational issues, including corrosion, evaporative losses, and fouling,» said Ah - Hyung (Alissa) Park, the chair in applied climate
science and associate professor of
Earth and environmental engineering
at Columbia University, who was not involved in the
research.
David Legg, who carried out the
research as part of his PhD in the Department of
Earth Science and Engineering
at Imperial College London, says:
«Essentially what happened was that the cold water influx altered the rainfall patterns
at the middle of the globe,» said Rachael Rhodes, a
research associate in the College of
Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences
at Oregon State University and lead author on the study, which was funded by the National
Science Foundation.
He is also Professor of Environmental
Science and Public Policy in Harvard's Department of
Earth and Planetary Sciences and Visiting Distinguished Scientist
at the Woods Hole
Research Center.
The study, which also involved researchers from the National Oceanography Centre, Southampton and University College London, was funded by a Natural Environment
Research Council (NERC) studentship to Dr O'Dea and a Royal Society
Research Fellowship to Dr Gibbs, Senior
Research Fellow in Ocean and
Earth Science at the University of Southampton, with additional support by the UK Ocean Acidification
Research Programme.
Understanding Mountains and Minorities by A. Sasso, 1 July 2005 Christopher Andronicos, a professor
at University of Texas
at El Paso, studies fault movement in the Rio Grande Rift Region, and is actively involved in the Pathways
Research Experience Program - a mentoring program that prepares undergraduates for graduate education in the
earth sciences.
Earth - observation programs will fail to provide the data continuity required for climate
science unless they are more adequately managed and supported, Kevin Trenberth, a senior researcher
at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Sciences in Boulder, Colo., told the World Climate
Research Program conference in Denver, Colo., last week.
The findings, which have just been published in three separate scientific journals —
Earth System
Science Data, Environmental
Research Letters and Nature Climate Change — will also be presented today
at the U.N. climate conference in Bonn, Germany.
Minerals crystallize from basaltic magma in a certain order, explained Alian Wang, PhD,
research professor in
earth and planetary
sciences in Arts &
Sciences at Washington University.
To get a red sky, you need aerosols, explains A. R. Ravishankara, director of chemical
sciences at the NOAA
Earth System
Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colo..
Professor Mark Sephton, co-author of the
research from the Department of
Earth Science and Engineering
at Imperial College London, said: «We've literally only scratched the surface of Mars in our search for life, but so far the results have been inconclusive.
«Induced seismicity complicates the seismic hazard equation,» said Gail Atkinson, professor of
earth sciences at Western University in Ontario Canada, whose
research details how a new source of seismicity, such as an injection disposal well, can fundamentally alter the potential seismic hazard in an area.
«What's pushing this rise in extreme outbreaks, during which the vast majority of tornado - related fatalities occur, is far from obvious in the present state of climate
science,» said Cohen, the Abby Rockefeller Mauzé Professor
at Rockefeller University and Professor of
Earth and Environmental Sciences
at Columbia University, who conducted the
research while a visiting scholar in UChicago's Department of Statistics.
Alfonso F. Davila is a
research scientist at the SETI Institute and the NASA Ames Research Center in California since 2009, with substantial experience in Earth and Planetary s
research scientist
at the SETI Institute and the NASA Ames
Research Center in California since 2009, with substantial experience in Earth and Planetary s
Research Center in California since 2009, with substantial experience in
Earth and Planetary
sciences.
One noteworthy semi-surprise: NASA's
Earth Science program, a major climate
research funder and a target for Congressional Republicans, is funded in the request
at $ 1.8 billion.
For this
research project, Strausfeld teamed up with Gengo Tanaka of the Japan Agency for Marine -
Earth Science and Technology in Yokosuka, Japan; Xianguang Hou, director of the Yunnan Key Laboratory for Paleobiology
at Yunnan University in Kunming, China; and Hou's colleague Xiaoya Ma who is presently working with Gregory Edgecombe in the paleontology department of the Natural History Museum, London.