Skip to main content
University of Wisconsin–Madison
HAQAST logo
NASA HEALTH AND AIR QUALITY APPLIED SCIENCES TEAM
Connecting NASA Data and Tools with Health and Air Quality Stakeholders
  • About
  • People Expand Collapse
    • Leadership Team
    • HAQAST Members
    • HAQAST Ambassadors
    • HAQAST-2, 2016 – 2020
    • HAQAST-1, 2011 – 2016 (a.k.a. AQAST)
  • Projects Expand Collapse
    • Tiger Teams
    • Publications
  • News Expand Collapse
    • Recent News
    • HAQAST Flash
    • Newsletters
    • Twitter
  • Tools and Resources Expand Collapse
    • Getting Started
    • Data and Tools
    • For Educators
    • NASA ARSET Training
    • Links to Health and Air Quality Community
    • Science Communication and Policy
    • Glossary
    • Satellite Data for Environmental Justice
  • Meetings Expand Collapse
    • HAQAST Missouri
    • Past Meetings
  • Contact
  1. Home
  2. Uncategorized

Uncategorized

Holloway interviewed for ‘Women Breaking Barriers’ series

Posted on April 2, 2018

“Science fields offer a lot of great jobs and opportunities, so my goal is just to keep the door open to science for as many people as possible.” -Tracey Holloway Tracey Holloway was interviewed for …

Posted in Uncategorized

NASA Giovanni Video Tutorial Now Available

Posted on March 27, 2018

  Watch the tutorial video on NASA HAQAST’s YouTube channel to learn how to use NASA Giovanni. And here’s a written tutorial (you can find a downloadable pdf here).

Posted in Uncategorized

NASA Worldview Video Tutorial Now Available

Posted on February 14, 2018

  Watch the tutorial video on NASA HAQAST’s YouTube channel to learn how to use NASA Worldview. And here’s a written tutorial (you can find a downloadable pdf here).

Posted in Uncategorized

West Featured in UNC podcast: Climate change and air pollution

Posted on January 5, 2018

“Each year, millions of people die from exposure to air pollution. And if unaddressed, climate change could bring those numbers up even higher by the end of the century.” Click here to read more from …

Posted in Uncategorized

Miller published a piece in Physics Today profiling HAQAST

Posted on December 19, 2017

““Out of sight, out of mind” goes the common saying, yet what people can’t see can have an important impact on their well-being. Invisible gases including nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, and ozone negatively affect …

Posted in Uncategorized

West Co-Authors Widely Featured paper on the benefits of greenhouse gas mitigation for U.S. air quality and human health

Posted on December 19, 2017

“The USA will benefit from improved air quality in the future, through actions to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions both domestically and globally. That is the primary finding of new research led by the University …

Posted in Uncategorized

Zondlo’s Research Group at Princeton Develops a Mobile Sensing Platform for Air Pollutants

Posted on December 18, 2017

“Severe air pollution causes the premature death of more than 5.5 million people per year, according to news reports. Mark Zondlo, the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment’s associate director for external partnerships and …

Posted in Uncategorized

Fiore and Jin’s research featured as NASA Image of the Day

Posted on November 7, 2017

  Ozone pollution near Earth’s surface is one of the main ingredients of summertime smog and a primary cause of poor air quality. Yet it is not directly measurable from space because of the abundance …

Posted in Uncategorized

Anenberg and Henze’s Nature Article on Health Impacts of Diesel NOx Emissions Webinar Available

Posted on September 20, 2017

Susan Anenberg, Daven Henze, and the authors of the Nature paper on diesel NOx emissions recently gave a webinar on their findings, which was recorded and posted to YouTube. Check out the full webinar here. …

Posted in Recent News, Uncategorized

NASA profiles Pierce’s work on high-ozone events

Posted on September 20, 2017

HAQAST investigator Brad Pierce’s work on high-ozone events over Lake Michigan was recently profiled by NASA. “NASA researchers are conducting science flights along the Wisconsin-Illinois Lake Michigan shoreline to help better understand the formation and …

Posted in Uncategorized
  • You're on page 1
  • 2
  • Next page

Site footer content

University logo that links to main university website

HAQAST Resources

  • About
  • HAQAST Members
  • HAQAST Publications
  • Recent News – Old
  • Tools
  • Get Involved
  • Subscribe to HAQAST Newsletters

HAQAST Meetings

  • HAQAST Wisconsin
  • All Meetings

Contact Us

    • twitter
    • youtube
    • linkedin
    • facebook

© 2023 NASA Health and Air Quality Applied Science Team

Website feedback, questions or accessibility issues: apavelic@wisc.edu.

Learn more about accessibility at UW–Madison.

This site was built using the UW Theme | Privacy Notice | © 2023 Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System.