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The public health impacts of heat waves include exhaustion, heat stroke, and even death. Extreme heat results in about 600 deaths per year in the U.S., with the elderly, very young, outdoor workers, and people with mental illness and chronic diseases at higher risk. In the 1960s, major cities in the U.S. averaged about two heat waves per year. In the 2010s, that number rose to more than six heat waves per year. Even under different climate models and emission scenarios, results indicate that extreme heat events are becoming worse.

Records of temperature, humidity, and other environmental metrics, collected over decades, form a climate data record that can be used to reliably assess heat wave patterns and overall climate change. For example, NASA's Terra satellite has acquired land surface temperature data since 2000, and NASA's Aqua satellite has collected similar data since 2002. With consistent and continuous data coverage, reliable temperature and humidity anomalies can be assessed.

Heat-related deaths are preventable, but prevention requires a knowledge of where vulnerable populations exist and what interventions are needed in these communities. For example, the urban heat island effect represents the relatively higher temperatures found in urban areas compared to surrounding rural areas. In addition, socioeconomic status may limit a person's ability to deal with extreme heat. Increasing frequency of heat events and other natural disasters may lead to migration and a change in population composition.

NASA’s stores of Earth observation and socioeconomic data help researchers understand the effects of heat on the planet and its inhabitants. Our data products useful to the study of heat include global gas flare surveys, extreme heat estimates, and records of extreme heat exposure around the world. 

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This image shows a temperature map of South Florida and Miami-Dade County using MODIS data. Areas on the right side of the image are in the county and along Florida’s Atlantic coast. These areas are colored in variations of yellow, orange, and red to indicate higher land surface temperatures. The surrounding area is colored largely in shades of green to show lower temperatures. A temperature scale in Celsius is also included showing the range of temperatures from green to red to be from 28.7 to 47.6 deg.
Living in Heat that Kills
A NASA-funded environmental justice study is helping protect Miami-area residents at risk from dangerously high temperatures.
This temperature map shows the land surface temperatures throughout Los Angeles County on Aug. 14, 2020. The observation was made possible by NASA's Ecosystem Spaceborne Thermal Radiometer Experiment on Space Station (ECOSTRESS), which measured a peak land surface temperature in the San Fernando Valley, northwest of downtown Los Angeles, of 128.3 degrees Fahrenheit (53.5 degrees Celsius).
Urban Extreme Heat Dataset Offers Worldwide Exposure Estimates
A SEDAC dataset provides the most accurate record of how extreme heat in urban areas across the globe has changed.
Discover and Visualize Heat Data
NASA data help us understand Earth's changing systems in more detail than ever before, and visualizations bring these data to life, making Earth science concepts accessible, beautiful, and impactful.
Data visualization is a powerful tool for analysis, trend and pattern recognition, and communication. Our resources help you find world-class data visualizations to complement and enhance your research. We also have tools and tutorials to help you translate heat data into compelling visuals.
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This is an artist rendition of the Aqua satellite in orbit.
Data from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aboard Aqua and other instruments provide researchers with frequent current and historical global temperature measurements spanning decades.

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