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Interactive interface for browsing full-resolution, global, daily satellite images. Supports time-critical application areas such as wildfire management, air quality measurements, and weather forecasting. Data is generally available within three hours of observation.
Welcome to NASA's Eyes, a way for you to learn about your home planet, our solar system, the universe beyond and the spacecraft exploring them.
Worldview is an easy-to-use visualization tool that allows users to interactively browse, compare, animate, and download over 1,200 visualized satellite data products. Many of those products are available within hours of being acquired—essentially showing the entire Earth as it looks "right now". This supports time-critical applications, such ...
NASA’s Worldview app lets you explore Earth as it looks right now or as it looked almost 20 years ago. See a view you like? Take a snapshot and share your map
Eyes on the Earth. Fly along with NASA's Earth science missions in real-time, monitor Earth's vital signs like Carbon Dioxide, Ozone and Sea Level, and see satellite imagery of the latest major weather events, all in an immersive, 3D environment.
NASA high-definition satellite images. Updated every day since the year 2000.
Explore more than 12,820 images. Click on a numbered circle to zoom in on that area and view more stories. Click on a solid dot to view a preview image and a link to read the story. Explore your backyard or the other side of the Earth with EO Explorer.
Track Earth's vital signs and fly along with NASA's Earth-observing satellites. See natural hazards from space, view near real-time science data and keep an Eye on our planet's heath with this stunning 3D visualization.
For 20 years, Terra, the flagship Earth observing satellite, has chronicled changes on Earth. Designed and built in the 1980s and 90s, NASA and Lockheed Martin engineers set out to build a satellite that could take simultaneous measurements of Earth’s atmosphere, land, and water.
Eyes on the Earth will show a visualization of data from NASA’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2 satellite, which measures the gas from the ground to the top of the atmosphere. (To ensure the greatest accuracy, the mission reprocesses the data in the months prior to it appearing in Eyes.)