Earth Climate Models Bring Exoplanet To Life
Music: "Machine Learning" by Jon Cotton and Ben Niblett; "No Wave" by Julien Vignon; "The Missing Star" by Matthew Charles Gilbert Davidson; all from Universal Production Music
Complete transcript available.
In a generic brick building on the northwestern edge of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center campus in Greenbelt, Md., thousands of computers packed in racks the size of vending machines hum in a deafening chorus of data crunching. Day and night, they spit out five quadrillion calculations per second. Known collectively as the Discover supercomputer, these machines are tasked with running sophisticated climate models to predict Earth’s future climate.
But now, they’re also sussing out something much farther away: whether any of the more than 4,000 curiously weird planets beyond our solar system — or exoplanets — discovered in the past two decades could have the ingredients necessary to support life.
Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
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Producer
- LK Ward (USRA)
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Public affairs officer
- Claire Andreoli (NASA/GSFC)
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Writer
- Lonnie Shekhtman (ADNET Systems, Inc.)
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Visualizer
- Alex Kekesi (Global Science and Technology, Inc.)
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Scientists
- Anthony DelGenio (NASA/GSFC GISS)
- Michael J. Way (NASA/GSFC GISS)
- Avi Mandell (NASA/GSFC)
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Animator
- Chris Smith (USRA)
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Technical support
- Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET Systems, Inc.)
Release date
This page was originally published on Thursday, January 23, 2020.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 1:45 PM EDT.