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Los Angeles fires leave NASA's Deep Space Network mission control empty for 1st time in 60 yearsNATIONAL HARBOR, Md. — The deadly wildfires burning across Los Angeles have caused widespread devastation across Southern California, and their impact has managed to reach beyond Earth.
Analysis of data from NASA radar aboard an airplane shows that the decades-old active landslide area on the Palos Verdes Peninsula has expanded. Researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in ...
And it veered close to a major NASA center. After erupting in wooded hills outside of Los Angeles' community of Altadena, the Eaton Fire — one of the damaging conflagrations impacting the region ...
With Los Angeles in the grips of several brutal wildfires which have decimated thousands of buildings and killed five people, a NASA satellite has snapped images of the huge volumes of smoke ...
The picture was snapped on January 11 using NASA's AVIRIS-3 (Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer-3) on board a B200 aircraft flying over Los Angeles ... around LA: the 799-acre Hurst ...
A map of LA County showing ... data from NASA's Short-term Prediction Research and Transition (SPoRT) Center The Southern California wildfires continue to burn across Los Angeles County, and ...
Fox praised the American Astronomical Society for refunding registration fees to would-be attendees affected by the fires in Los Angeles. NASA, she added, has also relaxed its deadlines for ...
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