Tag: science
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ScienceCasts: The Power of Light
The V! Studios animation team keeps pushing out new content for NASA. This ScienceCast explores a new NASA study investigating how different light spectra can be used to effect astronauts’ sleep, or lack of sleep.
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ScienceCasts: The Mystery of Coronal Heating
Our animation team is at it again, producing more amazing content for NASA Science. Observations by NASA’s IRIS spacecraft suggest that “heat bombs” are going off in the sun’s outer atmosphere, helping to explain why the solar corona is so mysteriously hot.
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ScienceCasts: Taking the Surprise out of Hurricane Season
NASA is helping improve the ability of forecasters to predict hurricane intensity by flying missions into and above the hearts of powerful storms. Some work from our animation team supporting NASA Sciencecasts.
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ScienceCasts: 2016 Ends with Three Supermoons
More top notch animation compiled using After Effects.
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ScienceCasts: Massive Cloud on Collision Course with the Milky Way
More crack animation for NASA and the Sciencecast series.
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ScienceCasts: NASA Spacecraft Fly in Record-setting Formation
Four NASA spacecraft have performed a thrilling maneuver to understand the physics of explosive reconnection in Earth’s magnetosphere. More first rate AfterEffects work in play here. Where does NASA get such top notch animation? I wonder.
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ScienceCasts: To Bennu and Back
NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is scheduled to launch on a mission to orbit, map and collect samples from the asteroid Bennu, and return to Earth 7 years later.
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ScienceCasts: A Spectacular Conjunction of Venus and Jupiter
Great animation to illustrate Venus and Jupiter converging for a spectacular conjunction in the sunset sky on August 27th.
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ScienceCasts: Reshuffling Heat on a Warming Planet
Way cool animation on this ScienceCast for the Science Mission Directorate of NASA.
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ScienceCasts: Monitoring Air Quality
How did we miss sharing this one? A global effort to monitor air quality is in the works as the US, Korea, and the European Union prepare to launch geostationary satellites capable of monitoring pollutants and other aerosols. Visit http://science.nasa.gov/ for more.