Celebrate Earth Day with NASA's Earth Tools and Posters
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Celebrate Earth Day with NASA's Earth Tools and Posters

To celebrate Earth Day (April 22) this year, NASA invites everyone to share views of Earth with the world – and to tack up artists' perspectives of our planet home on their walls. The agency recently gathered several Earth Day posters on one handy website, allowing people to download artists' impressions of a boat among sea creatures, a person relaxing by lake and artfully made face of plants, among other scenes. If you're more interested in real-life images and data, check out NASA's Eyes on the Earth app, which shows where all the agency's Earth-orbiting satellites are right now. [Earth from Space! NASA's Classic Photos]

 

To celebrate Earth Day (April 22) 2018, NASA is highlighting the variety of innovative technologies and encouraging the public to use several online tools and the hashtag # NASA4Earth. Credit: NASA Once inspired by such pictures, you can then share your data for Earth science, thanks to some other NASA tools. Worldview allows anyone using a tablet, laptop or desktop to look at changing views of Earth's surface. You can zoom in to any area of ​​the world and share with GIF showing raging wildfires, tropical storms or whatever else may happen in that particular spot.

NASA's free Earth Day 2018 poster uses the words of Carl Sagan to remind us of the beauty of our planet and its place in space.

Credit: NASA

Credit: NASA And the free GLOBE Observer smartphone app helps the public track the breeding sites and larvae of mosquitoes. The aim is to help prevent the spread of Zika and other diseases that transmit mosquitoes to humans, NASA officials said. NASA is also participating in Earth Day Houston, an event held on Sunday (April 22) from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. CDT at Discovery Green, 1500 McKinney St. in Houston. NASA describes this as "a citywide event featuring displays, exhibits and talks on topics ranging from alternative energy to recycling methods." There will be virtual reality goggles showing the International Space Station (a vantage point from which astronauts and scientific instruments observe the Earth). And scientists will be talking about the importance of Earth imagery to the environment, NASA officials said. Originally published on Space.com.

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