How Do We Know: Tracking C02 Emissions
- Published: Dec 21st, 2010
Program Summary
Scientist David Crisp explains how NASA tracks regional CO2 emissions from space using sophisticated satellite technology.
- Posted in Causes, Greenhouse Gases, Trends, Climate, Flora & Fauna, Landscapes, Society, Global
Related Scientist
David Crisp - Dr. David Crisp is a Senior Research Scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology and the Principal Investigator of the NASA Earth System Science Pathfinder Orbiting Carbon Observatory mission. His research has focused primarily on the development of radiative transfer algorithms for remote sensing and climate models of Venus, Earth, and Mars.
Related Content
Related Graphics
-
- 2012: Warmest March Ever Recorded
- You knew it was warm last month, but today it’s official: it wasn’t just warm; it was thewarmest March ever recorded.
-
- Pollen Searches are on the Rise
- Online searches for the word “pollen” have gone through the roof this spring.
-
- Spring Comes Early Across the U.S.
- The Lower 48 as a whole had an average shift of “first leaf” from March 20 to March 17 – approximately 3 days earlier.
-
- Global Warming Coastal Flood Risk
- The odds of extreme coastal floods nationally by 2030.
-
- Warming Winters in the U.S.
- The way winters have changed in the United States between 1895 and 2010
-
- Top 10 Hardest Hit States of 2011
- This slideshow recaps the year's extraordinarily destructive climate and weather events, including searing heat waves, parching
-
- Maps Show Quarter Million New Yorkers Reside Below Potential Storm Surge Level
- This map shows the land zone within five vertical feet of the average high tide line in the New York City area.
-
- Plants and Climate Change
- A visual look at six plant species that are already being affected by climate change.
-
- Ruthless Tornadoes of 2011
- Photos from one of the worst tornado seasons to ever hit the U.S.
-
- Wildfires in the West
- In 2006, wildfires burned seven million acres in the West, the equivalent area of five of the country's largest national parks.
Related Videos
-
- March 2012 Becomes Warmest on Record
- This NOAA animation shows the locations of each of the 15,000 temperature records set in sequence over the 31 days in March.
-
- Will Your Home Flood?
- Sample coverage of the national report called Surging Seas, which has recalculated the risk of flooding to coastal communities.
-
- A Look at Flood Risks Across America
- Surging Seas: A project of Climate Central
-
- Watch 131 Years of Global Warming in 26 Seconds
- An amazing 26-second video depicting how temperatures around the globe have warmed since 1880.
-
- Adapting to New Normals: The Heat’s On
- One city in the Mid-Atlantic already is taking the new climate "normals" into consideration as it plans for weather extremes.
-
- How Do We Know: Hunting Hurricanes
- Scientist Jack Beven explains the technology used to forecast and track potential hurricanes as they happen.
-
- ClimateCenter: Summer Forecast 2011
- This year’s Atlantic hurricane season is expected to be busier than usual. Heidi Cullen makes the climate connection.
-
- Wildfires Out West
- In different parts of the American West, climate influences wildfires in unexpected ways.
-
- ClimateCenter: Spring Outlook
- With what feels like an especially long winter coming to an end, Dr. Heidi Cullen gives a climate outlook for spring 2011.
-
- ClimateCenter: The New Normals
- What we’ve known as “normals” for our climate the past decade will very likely change soon.














Twitter Facebook YouTube Vimeo Pinterest RSS