NASA September 2023 Temperature Data Shows Continued Record Warming

NASA September 2023 Temperature Data Shows Continued Record Warming

Data visualization of a line graph. On the Y axis is the temperature anomaly in degrees Celsius, ranging from below -2 to above 3. The months of the year are on the X axis, starting with January at left and ending with December at right. Temperatures advance from January through December left to right, and also move up during warmer months and down again during cooler months to form a roughly bell shaped curve. The color of each line reflects the year, with colder purples for the 1960s and warmer oranges and yellows for more recent years. As the animation plays, the years count up from 1960 to 2023. The lines get progressively higher, indicating a long-term warming trend. At the end of the animation, the line representing 2023 emerges above all previous years, with September 2023 particularly distant from previous Septembers.
NASA/Peter Jacobs

Continuing the temperature trend from this summer, September 2023 was the hottest September on record, according to scientists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS). The month also set the record for the highest temperature anomaly – the largest difference from the long-term average.

This visualization shows global temperature anomalies along with the underlying seasonal cycle. Temperatures advance from January through December left to right, rising during warmer months and falling during cooler months. The color of each line represents the year, with colder purples for the 1960s and warmer oranges and yellows for more recent years. A long-term warming trend can be seen as the height of each month increases over time, the result of human activities releasing greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

“What’s remarkable is that these record values are happening before the peak of the current El Nino event, whereas in 2016 the previous record values happened in the spring, after the peak,” said Gavin Schmidt, director of GISS. El Nino is the warm phase of a naturally recurring pattern of trade winds and ocean temperatures in the Eastern Tropical Pacific that influences global temperatures and precipitation patterns.

By Katy Mersmann

NASA Goddard

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NASA Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month 2023: Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa

NASA Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month 2023: Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa

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NASA Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month 2023: Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa

Portrait photo of Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa.
Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa, project manager at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.
NASA

Dr. Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa, born and raised in Puerto Rico, made a courageous decision to pivot her academic studies – launching her towards an accomplished career in defense, space, and aeronautics research for NASA.

She headed to medical school after earning her undergraduate degree in chemistry from the University of Puerto Rico. After two years, she knew it was not the right path for her and shifted her sights to graduating with a doctorate in physics.

Now, she manages foundational electrified aircraft propulsion research for NASA’s Transformational Tools and Technologies project, leading a team of researchers aiming to develop innovative materials and methods to advance sustainable aviation.

Biaggi-Labiosa giving a presentation.
Biaggi-Labiosa delivers a presentation in Spanish to engineering students at the University of Puerto Rico.
NASA

This past year, she gave back to her alma mater. Dr. Biaggi-Labiosa was instrumental in organizing university engagements and industry visits to Puerto Rico, building relationships with NASA. She delivered a project overview in Spanish to an engaged group of engineering students and has helped recruit inspiring individuals for NASA internships.

Today, we celebrate Dr. Biaggi-Labiosa’s selection as a 2023 Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Awards Conference (HENAAC) award winner in the category of Outstanding Technical Achievement – Government.

Individuals who are awarded in the Outstanding Technical Achievement category have made a significant technological contribution to STEM through key research and by having designed, developed, managed, or assisted in the development of a product, service, system, or intellectual property.

The HENAAC awards were created in 1989 to honor the world-class achievements of outstanding Hispanic engineers, scientists, and STEM professionals.

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Last Updated

Oct 13, 2023

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Lillian Gipson

Contact

Jim Banke
jim.banke@nasa.gov

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ISS Research Communications Lead Jennifer Hamilton

ISS Research Communications Lead Jennifer Hamilton

Portrait of Jennifer Hamilton for Faces of NASA Project.

“I can almost directly trace my entire career back to [my extracurriculars] in high school and a mentor I had. My first foray into engineering was this high school program called the Robotics Science Academy. It was basically my high school’s attempt to put together a curriculum that was designed specifically to prepare students for an engineering track in college. But since it was the first year of trying this program, there were only about eight of us. The high school teacher leading the robotics track, Mr. Donelson, was always [encouraging] about trying new things and getting out of our comfort zone. And I think that always really helped me.

“So I owe a lot to him, for sure. He would stay after school with us and walk us through our assignments, and ended up encouraging us to enter an underwater robotics competition. Because we were fairly landlocked — which is obviously not great for underwater robotics that are meant for deep sea missions — we sort of lucked our way into the international competition.

“Even so, we ended up winning a ‘bang for your buck’ award based on the amount of tasks we completed in the mission and the cost of our robot, because the cost was very, very low. It was just this Frankenstein monstrosity of PVC pipes and messy high schooler soldering and wiring. But no matter how it looked, I was lucky to have teachers like Mr. Donelson to push all of us forward.”

— Jennifer Hamilton, Communications Lead, ISS Research Integration Office, NASA’s Johnson Space Center

Image Credit: NASA / James Blair
Interviewer: NASA / Thalia Patrinos

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Thalia K. Patrinos

NASA Glenn Employees Chosen as Outstanding Hispanic STEM Professionals

NASA Glenn Employees Chosen as Outstanding Hispanic STEM Professionals

Nelson Morales (left), Janette C. Briones (center), and Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa smile at one another and sit on couches around a circular wooden table inside NASA Glenn Research Center’s Aerospace Communications Facility. Autumn leaves can be seen outside a large glass window in the background.
Nelson Morales (left), Janette C. Briones (center), and Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa at NASA Glenn Research Center’s Aerospace Communications Facility in October 2023.
Credit: NASA/Sara Lowthian-Hanna

Three employees from NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland have been chosen to receive awards that recognize the achievements of outstanding Hispanic engineers, scientists, and STEM professionals.

Janette C. Briones, Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa, and Nelson Morales will be presented with Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Award Corporation (HENAAC) and Luminary awards during the Great Minds in STEM conference in Pasadena, California, held from Oct. 11 through 14.

Learn more about the NASA Glenn honorees and each of their recognitions:

Nelson Morales

Nelson Morales poses next to a small model of NASA’s Space Launch System. He is wearing a blue collared shirt with a NASA logo.
Nelson Morales, chief of NASA Glenn’s Structural Mechanics Branch, has been chosen as a 2023 Luminary. This award recognizes Hispanic innovators who are engineering the future while lighting the way for the next generation of STEM leaders. Luminaries are chosen for their achievements leading, collaborating, and initiating key programs and research in their respective fields. “It’s an honor to receive this award because we want to be role models for the Hispanic community,” Morales said. “I am thankful for all of the people who have helped and supported me throughout the years and have made this possible.”
Credit: NASA/Sara Lowthian-Hanna

Janette C. Briones

Janette C. Briones stands to the right of a poster about cognitive communications. She is crossing her arms and wearing professional attire. She poses in front of a blue metal wall.
Janette C. Briones, project manager and principal investigator for NASA Glenn’s Cognitive Communications Project, has received the 2023 HENAAC Professional Achievement I (Government) award. The HENAAC award recognizes leaders, innovators, and champions who contribute to the Hispanic community at the highest levels of academia, government, military, and corporate America. “It’s something that I wasn’t expecting; there are so many outstanding engineers,” Briones said of being chosen for the award. “I’m very grateful that I have received it, and I have worked hard for it.”
Credit: NASA/Sara Lowthian-Hanna

Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa

Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa stands with her hand resting on a white couch in front of a large glass window. Trees can be seen through the window, and she is wearing glasses and professional attire.
Azlin Biaggi-Labiosa, NASA Glenn’s manager for the Foundational Electrified Aircraft Propulsion Subproject, has received the 2023 HENAAC Outstanding Technical Achievement (Government) award. The HENAAC award recognizes leaders, innovators, and champions who contribute to the Hispanic community at the highest levels of academia, government, military, and corporate America. “It feels great to be honored and appreciated,” Biaggi-Labiosa said. “It validates all the work that I put in these 14 years [at NASA].”
Credit: NASA/Sara Lowthian-Hanna

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Kelly M. Matter

Preparing Psyche for Launch

Preparing Psyche for Launch

In the foreground, a plant with several small white and yellow flowers is in focus near a grassy hill. In the distance, the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket and Psyche spacecraft roll out of a large rectangular building with "SpaceX" and an American flag on the side.
NASA / Aubrey Gemignani

A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket with the Psyche spacecraft onboard is seen as it is rolled out of the horizontal integration facility on Oct. 10, 2023, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida as preparations continue for the Psyche mission. NASA’s Psyche spacecraft will travel to a metal-rich asteroid by the same name orbiting the Sun between Mars and Jupiter to study its composition. The spacecraft also carries the agency’s Deep Space Optical Communications technology demonstration, which will test laser communications beyond the Moon.

If all goes as planned, asteroid Psyche’s gravity will capture the spacecraft in late July 2029, and Psyche will begin its prime mission in August. It will spend about two years orbiting the asteroid to take pictures, map the surface, and collect data to determine Psyche’s composition.

NASA and SpaceX are targeting Friday, Oct. 13, 2023, at 10:19 a.m. EDT for launch from Kennedy Space Center. Watch the launch on NASA TV.

Image Credit: NASA/Aubrey Gemignani

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Monika Luabeya