PUBLISHED Feb 12, 2024 NASA’s Science Mission Directorate Creates AI Language Model for Better Data Stewardship The SMD's new large language model will power features such as metadata assignments and intelligent search.
PUBLISHED Feb 26, 2024 View the Astronomy and Geodesy Data Archives NASA provides data on astronomy and geodesy to aid scientific disciplines that study Earth's position in space, shape, and gravitational field.
PUBLISHED Feb 26, 2024 Software for the NASA Science Mission Directorate Workshop 2024 May 7, 2024 12:00 pm Washington, D.C. This workshop aims to explore the current opportunities and challenges for the various categories and lifecycle stages of software that are relevant for activities funded by the NASA Science Mission Directorate (SMD).
PUBLISHED Jan 13, 2025 ESA-NASA Workshop: AI Foundation Models for Earth Observation May 5–7, 2025 ESA-ESRIN, Frascati, Italy NASA and ESA's AI Foundation Models for Earth Observation workshop will explore opportunities and challenges for using foundation models to advance Earth science.
PUBLISHED Jan 28, 2025 Spotlight on Data: SOHO The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) mission delivers data about the Sun, heliosphere, space weather, and comets that supercharge scientific discoveries about our nearest star.
Read more about NASA Selects Proposals to Study Stellar Explosions, Galaxies, Stars. The accepted mission proposals include capabilities for ultraviolet, X-ray, and gamma ray observations.
Read more about First Images from the James Webb Space Telescope NASA revealed the Webb Telescope’s first images of the unseen universe.
Read more about NASA’s Fermi Confirms Star Wreck as Source of Extreme Cosmic Particles Astronomers have long sought the launch sites for some of the highest-energy protons in our galaxy. Now a study using 12 years of data from NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope confirms that one supernova remnant is just such a place.
Read more about NASA’s Fermi Hunts for Gravitational Waves From Monster Black Holes Astronomers think waves from orbiting pairs of supermassive black holes in distant galaxies are light-years long and have been trying to observe them for decades, and now they’re one step closer thanks to NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope.