I hate that attitude, especially since a HUGE part of NASA is studying Earth.
I know this is preaching to the choir but problems on Earth that NASA is contributing to understanding and solving (off the top of my head): they build all of NOAA's weather satellites (weather forecasts, hurricane prediction), they do research on global air quality (that we breathe), fire detection (that destroys homes), the ozone hole (that kills life), land use including watching forests and farms change (that provides food and resources), the disappearing ice sheets and glaciers (climate change, sea level rise), aquifers (drinking water and agriculture), global rainfall (same, plus flood and landslide warnings), snow cover (also drinking water), energy use with night lights, phytoplankton (health of the oceans which people depend on for food), and then the downstream applications for all of these that clever people think up because the data is free and accessible. They do the basic research for how all of these systems work, so that we can build better climate models, and they've been doing this for long enough that scientists can see 10-50 year trends.
And looking at our planet helps us understand what to look for on other planets. Because that is so amazing! And cool! And SPACE!
Sorry to rant. Earth science person here (so also all the grants that NASA awards to universities to do research). But yeah, I hate that attitude so much. It's so sad and small-thinking. All the stuff we learn about other planets gives us new ways to think about our own.
no subject
I know this is preaching to the choir but problems on Earth that NASA is contributing to understanding and solving (off the top of my head): they build all of NOAA's weather satellites (weather forecasts, hurricane prediction), they do research on global air quality (that we breathe), fire detection (that destroys homes), the ozone hole (that kills life), land use including watching forests and farms change (that provides food and resources), the disappearing ice sheets and glaciers (climate change, sea level rise), aquifers (drinking water and agriculture), global rainfall (same, plus flood and landslide warnings), snow cover (also drinking water), energy use with night lights, phytoplankton (health of the oceans which people depend on for food), and then the downstream applications for all of these that clever people think up because the data is free and accessible. They do the basic research for how all of these systems work, so that we can build better climate models, and they've been doing this for long enough that scientists can see 10-50 year trends.
And looking at our planet helps us understand what to look for on other planets. Because that is so amazing! And cool! And SPACE!
Sorry to rant. Earth science person here (so also all the grants that NASA awards to universities to do research). But yeah, I hate that attitude so much. It's so sad and small-thinking. All the stuff we learn about other planets gives us new ways to think about our own.