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- Evaporation | NASA Earthdata
Evaporation Evaporation The physical process by which a liquid or solid is transformed to the gaseous
- Dead Sea and Salt Evaporation Ponds | NASA Earthdata
True-color image of the Dead Sea (the dark body of water) and salt evaporation ponds (the green blue green rectangular features at the southern end of the sea) This image was acquired on December 21, 2022, by the Multi-Spectral Instrument aboard the ESA (European Space Agency) Sentinel-2A and -2B satellites Explore this image in Worldview
- Evapotranspiration | NASA Earthdata
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 and assessing water availability, drought conditions, and crop production
- Glacier Power: What is Glacier Anatomy? | NASA Earthdata
In the lower region or ablation (output) zone, the glacier loses ice through melting and evaporation Older ice is carried down to greater and greater depth An equilibrium line divides the two areas This spot is like an old fashioned pair of scales used to weigh gold dust
- Glacier Power: How do Glaciers Move? | NASA Earthdata
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 Meltwater flows out to the terminus through hidden channels and tunnels Oldest ice is the deepest Equilibrium Line: An equilibrium line divides the two areas
- Hurricanes | NASA Earthdata
Hurricanes are one of the largest hazards to life and property on Earth Hurricanes are a rotating, tropical cyclone with a low pressure center (the eye) and 1-min average surface (10 m) winds in excess of 32 m s−1 (64 knots) in the Western Hemisphere
- Glacier Power Glossary | NASA Earthdata
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, Accumulation zone Process (especially snowfall and compression) by which a glacier gains snow and ice The area of a glacier where accumulation occurs Arete
- Runoff | NASA Earthdata
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 storms, precipitation accumulation or transpiration, melting ice or snow, seepage, evaporation, and percolation
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