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  1. Evapotranspiration - NASA Earthdata

    6 days ago · 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 …

  2. Dead Sea and Salt Evaporation Ponds - NASA Earthdata

    Dec 21, 2022 · 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 …

  3. Glacier Power Glossary - NASA Earthdata

    6 days ago · Glacier Power is a curriculum supplement developed by NASA’s Alaska Satellite Facility Distributed Active Archive Center (ASF DAAC). Glossary of Terms Ablation, Ablation zone …

  4. Glacier Power: What is Glacier Anatomy? - NASA Earthdata

    6 days ago · The accumulation (input) zone is where a glacier gains snow and ice through snowfall and compression. Ice begins to flow like a conveyor belt, driven by gravity and ever mounting snows. In …

  5. ECOSTRESS Gridded Evapotranspiration Instantaneous and Daytime L3 ...

    The ECOSTRESS Gridded Evapotranspiration Instantaneous and Daytime L3 Global 70 m (ECO_L3G_JET) Version 2 data product provides instantaneous canopy transpiration, leaf surface …

  6. MODIS/Terra Water Reservoir Monthly L3 Global V061

    ) and meteorological data from Global Land Data Assimilation System (GLDAS) are used to produce monthly evaporation rates and volume losses. The MOD28C3 data product contains a single layer …

  7. Glacier Power: How do Glaciers Move? - NASA Earthdata

    6 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. Meltwater …

  8. Earthdata

    MODISデータ製品MOD16のアルゴリズムと関連情報を説明する技術文書です。

  9. Runoff | NASA Earthdata

    Apr 15, 2026 · 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 …

  10. But warm areas with much evaporation and little precipitation increase salinity. So the atmosphere and ocean respire as one giant organism, exchanging breaths between seasons, even days. Within each …