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Earth, Through NASA's Eyes

2025/4/8
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NASA's Curious Universe

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德国圣诞市场袭击者,沙特阿拉伯裔心理医生。
J
Jacob Pinter
P
Patti Boyd
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Jacob Pinter: 我认为,我们对月球表面的了解甚至超过了对海洋运作方式的理解。数十亿年来,这颗普通的岩石行星形成了可呼吸的大气层和海洋。与我们已知的任何其他行星不同,生命在这里诞生。从太空的视角来看,地球是一个脆弱的蓝色弹珠,值得我们去理解和保护。 几十年来,美国国家航空航天局(NASA)一直致力于从空中、海洋、地面以及最重要的卫星轨道等多个角度研究地球。我们利用与理解人类如何在火星上生存相同的科学方法来理解地球的大气层和环境。我们许多最初的地形测绘技术都源于月球测绘。 NASA的数据是独一无二的。NASA的观测和系统持续不断地监测全球,几十年来一直如此。没有其他人能做到这一点。在这个春天,我们将探索地球,这只有NASA才能做到。在这个系列中,我们将讲述NASA地球科学的故事。我们将深入探讨我们色彩斑斓的海洋,以及NASA如何收集并与需要这些数据的人们(例如美国农民)共享这些数据。我们经历了一次又一次的干旱,对水的需求越来越大,降雨也越来越不可预测。如果没有NASA,你将无法找到这些重大问题的可持续解决方案。 Patti Boyd: 从太空之外的大气层中,当宇航员环顾四周时,首先,景色永远不会过时。它看起来寒冷、深邃而黑暗。而地球……这是我们所有人居住的唯一一颗星球……看起来像一颗美丽的宝石。你所知道的一切,你所亲近的每一个人,以及你曾经经历过的每一个体验,都尽收眼底。那么,我们赖以生存的地球是如何运作的呢?是什么让它如此独特? 我们经常忘记海洋的存在,它们往往处于背景之中,但它们对我们在这个星球上生存至关重要。单一的尺度是不够的。如果你想了解全球的情况,你真的需要在世界各地进行测量。这就是我们用卫星所做的事情。我们将深入研究几十年来对地球大气层的研究,从我们呼吸的空气到保护地球上所有生物的高层大气。

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Here at NASA, we've landed on the moon. That's one small step for man. We've driven robots across Martian craters. Touchdown confirmed. Perseverance safely on the surface of Mars, ready to begin seeking the sands of past life.

And we've peered into the depths of time and space. Decollage, liftoff from a tropical rainforest to the edge of time itself. James Webb begins a voyage back to the birth of the universe. But you don't have to look far to find an amazing, mysterious place. That's why we also study Earth. Well, there's a lot that we don't understand about our home planet. We understand...

I would argue more about the surface of the moon than we understand about how our oceans work.

I'm Jacob Pinter. Over billions of years, this average rocky planet developed a breathable atmosphere and oceans. And unlike any other planet we know of, life sprung up here. I'm Patti Boyd. From the vantage point of space, our Earth is a fragile blue marble, a place worth understanding and protecting. When an astronaut gets to space outside of our atmosphere,

and they look around. First of all, the view never gets old. It looks cold and deep and dark. And the Earth... This is our one little planet that all of us are living on. ...looks like this beautiful gem. All of everything that you've ever known and every person that you've been close to and every experience you've ever had in one glimpse of the eye. So how does our living Earth work? And what makes it so unique?

For decades here at NASA, we've been trying to understand our home from the air, the sea, the ground, and mostly from satellites orbiting high above the surface. We use the same kinds of science to understand the Earth's

atmosphere and environment as we would use to understand what would have to happen for humans to live on Mars. A lot of our initial mapping technologies on how to map topography came from mapping the moon. NASA data is unique. NASA observations and systems monitor the globe all the time. Always on, have been for decades. No one else does that.

So this spring on Curious Universe, we're exploring Earth the way only NASA can. In this series, we're telling the story of NASA Earth science. We'll dive into our colorful oceans.

We very often forget that the oceans are there and they tend to be a bit in the background, but their role is so critical to us being alive on this planet, right? A single yardstick isn't quite enough. You really have to measure it everywhere in the world if you want to see how the whole

and the whole climate is changing. And that's what we do with satellites. You'll hear why NASA doesn't just collect data, we share it with people who need it, like American farmers. We've had drought after drought. We have a lot more demand on water, less predictable rainfall. You're not going to get a sustainable solution for those types of big issues without NASA.

And go inside decades of research studying Earth's atmosphere. From the air we breathe to layers high above us that protect every living thing on the planet. Celebrate our home planet with a special mini-series of NASA's Curious Universe. Coming soon, right here in your podcast feed. Welcome to Earth.