
Evaporation - NASA Earthdata
3 days ago · Evaporation. The physical process by which a liquid or solid is transformed to the gaseous state; the ...
Evapotranspiration | NASA Earthdata
Mar 13, 2025 · Evapotranspiration (ET) is the sum of water evaporation from the land surface and its transpiration, or movement, through vegetation. ET measurements are useful in monitoring …
Glacier Power: How do Glaciers Move? | NASA Earthdata
3 days ago · Ablation Zone: Where the glacier loses ice through melting, calving, and evaporation Output Zone: In this zone, the glacier loses ice. This is the lower region of the glacier. …
Glacier Power Glossary | NASA Earthdata
Mar 13, 2025 · Processes (especially melting) by which a glacier loses ice and snow: melting, evaporation, calving, and erosion. The area of a glacier where ablation occurs. Accumulation, …
Runoff | NASA Earthdata
Mar 13, 2025 · Runoff is the measurement of the flow of water into a lake, stream or other waterbody, usually expressed in cubic feet per second. The flow is produced by rainfall from …
Through a Glass Darkly: Envisioning Ocean Heat Budget
Jul 28, 2020 · "But the TOPEX measurement is not a pure measurement of sea level due to heat. There are other factors in sea level, like rain and evaporation, that are not connected to heat. …
The Magic of Water | NASA Earthdata
Jul 28, 2020 · Soil moisture is one of the components of land-surface evapotranspiration, and is a required parameter for evaporation calculations. Its critical role in the process has been made …
Salt of the Sea | NASA Earthdata
Dec 28, 2020 · While 3.5 percent of Earth’s ocean is salt, freshwater added to the ocean dilutes salinity values. For example, strong rains across the equatorial Pacific from South American to …
evaporation increased, driven by higher surface water temperatures. “Climate change is definitely increasing evaporation,” Petchprayoon said. This does not surprise him. What does is the …
Glacier Power: What is Glacial Calving? | NASA Earthdata
Mar 13, 2025 · Look! Seeing is believing! Look at the large rocks in the woods and picture how they arrived there. Listen! The thunder of falling ice is a warning signal from Child’s Glacier.