Satellite Snapshots
Tonight will be the biggest and brightest full moon, colloquially called a "supermoon," of 2020.
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NOAA's Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite, which had been offline for about nine months due to a technical glitch, is fully operational
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Every day we rely on advanced technology – whether it's in the form of our cell phones, a GPS app or just having the lights…
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In celebration of Valentine’s Day we have hearts in our eyes as we think about our amazing satellites. They each have…
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Did you know that NOAA's satellites monitor more than just weather on Earth? Our satellites also help forecasters at NOAA's SWPC.
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Real-time data from DSCOVR and space weather forecasts are now available through the Space Weather Prediction Center. An archive of DSCOVR data is als
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A year after returning it's first image, NASA's EPIC camera, aboard NOAA's DSCOVR satellite, shows us an entire year from one million miles away.
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Launched one year ago, on February 11, 2015, DSCOVR – the nation’s first operational satellite in deep space – is now orbiting one million miles away