dc.contributor.author
| ['Solomon, S. C.', 'Baker, V. R.', 'Bloxham, J.', 'Booth, J.', 'Donnellan, A.', 'Elachi, C.', 'Evans, D.', 'Rignot, E.', 'Burbank, D.', 'Chao, B. F.', 'Chave, A.', 'Gillespie, A.', 'Herring, T.', 'Jeanloz, R.', 'LaBrecque, J.', 'Minster, B.', 'Pitman, W. C. III', 'Simons, M.', 'Turcotte, D. L.', 'Zoback, M. L.'] |
dc.date.accessioned
| 2004-09-16T23:52:23Z |
dc.date.available
| 2004-09-16T23:52:23Z |
dc.date.issued
| 2003-11 |
dc.description.abstract
| What are the most important challenges facing solid Earth science today and over the next two decades? And what is the best approach for NASA, in partnership with other agencies, to address these challenges? A new report, living on a restless planet, provides a blueprint for answering these questions. The top priority for a new spacecraft mission in the area of solid earth science over the next 5 years, according to this report, is a satellite dedicated to interferometric synthetic aperture radar(inSAR). |
dc.format.extent
| 1632286 bytes |
dc.format.mimetype
| application/pdf |
dc.identifier.citation
| ['EOS, transactions v.84, no. 45, pp.485-491', 'Washington, D.C., USA'] |
dc.identifier.clearanceno
| 03-2339 |
dc.identifier.uri
| http://hdl.handle.net/2014/7866 |
dc.language.iso
| en_US |
dc.publisher
| UNKNOWN |
dc.subject.other
| Earth magnetic field imaging spectroscopy solid earth science |
dc.title
| Plans for living on a restless planet sets NASA's solid Earth agenda |