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- The sky above is studded with stars
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and countless galaxies.
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In them, we can read not only our origin
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but also our final destination.
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The first phase of our
journey is complete.
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We are ready to undertake the second.
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With robotics, advanced
technologies, and sheer daring,
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we are now going to places
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that before we only dreamt
we might ever reach.
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- It was here at Peenemünde
on the Baltic Coast
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where the opening shots of
the space race were fired.
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Not an auspicious occasion.
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The backdrop to this extraordinary
effort was world war.
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The chief engineer did mutter, however,
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"The rocket functioned perfectly,
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"it just hit the wrong planet."
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Time and tide have changed that frontier.
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Now science and commercial
imperatives lead the way.
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Our push into the new frontier
is now genuine and humane,
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guided by science and
the hunger for discovery.
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Soon it will be underpinned
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by the commercial realities
of tourism and mining.
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Research and engineering
advances are ongoing.
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New communications and
sensing technologies,
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new space systems for
advanced aerobraking,
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new materials and manufacturing processes
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for new spacecraft,
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and safer launch systems,
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all aimed squarely at
a return to the moon.
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Then onto Mars for a long term stay.
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- The human flight component
I would like to see
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an experiment where resources
on the surface of Mars,
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from the rocks or the atmosphere
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could be used to generate fuel
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or other parts that would
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enable future exploration
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and cutting the tie,
so to speak, to Earth.
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You wouldn't necessarily have
to bring everything with you,
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you could actually
manufacture it on the planet,
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and that's a really exciting
additional component
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that we've been exploring
and analyzing in this work.
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- This will extend our reach even further,
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with planned excursions to
the asteroids and comets
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giving us access to
even greater resources.
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At the same time,
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it would help us protect
Earth from wayward objects
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posing a threat to our planet.
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Then there is the challenge
of the greater solar system
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visiting the outer
planets and their moons.
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Jupiter's Europa,
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Callisto, Ganymede.
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Or Saturn's Enceladus,
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a potential life-harboring location.
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Or cloud-covered Titan,
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which holds vast hydrocarbon resources.
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Then, the great interstellar voyages
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to other stars and other planets,
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like HD189733b, a gas giant,
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or Gliese 1214b, a water world,
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or even Kepler-186f, a
nearby Earth-like planet.
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Our first stop in this
journey takes us into orbit,
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where we can continue to look down
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at the world's changing environment
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and study the planet we call home.
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- We humans are mere passengers
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on board this vessel called Earth.
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We cannot control the direction she takes,
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how fast she spins,
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but we can influence
our complex and dynamic
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ecological climate engine.
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To study this machine that sustains us,
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scientists have used satellites
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as one of their primary tools.
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Of the 6,600 satellites launched so far,
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some 3,600 remain in orbit,
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with only 1,000 still operational.
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- There are two main sorts of satellites
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that we use for weather forecasting.
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The first sort is the
geostationary satellite.
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These geostationary satellites
are launched into orbit
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at 36,000 kilometers
above the earth's surface,
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and at this height they orbit the earth
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precisely once per day.
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I can illustrate it like this:
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the earth rotates around its axes
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on a 24 hour basis
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and at the same time, the
satellite orbits the earth
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so it always stays over the
same point of the earth.
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This way, it takes an image of the earth,
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now with our MSG series, every 15 minutes
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and it can provide very
high, rapid update cycles
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from that data.
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The other main source of
weather satellites we have
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are the polar orbiters.
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These orbit the earth at
a much lower altitude,
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about 800 kilometers,
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and they orbit pretty much
over the north and south pole
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in what we call a sun-synchronous orbit.
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Because they're much lower down,
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they're able to provide us
with a much more detailed view
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of the earth and the atmosphere.
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- The complexity of
the earth climate model
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is due to a range of variable inputs
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from solar radiation,
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solar winds, magnetic fields,
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gravity, thermal absorption,
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to water temperature and salinity,
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ice and cloud coverage,
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carbon dioxide and other
trace gases in the atmosphere,
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to name just a few.
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The first order of business
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has been to monitor our weather.
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Maximum scientific value
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comes from long term data gathering.
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It has to be reliable,
continuous, and uninterrupted.
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To this end, ESA and EUMETSAT
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have launched their
latest satellite, MetOp-B.
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- MetOp-B is particularly important
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to provide continuity of this data.
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This data has the largest single impact
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into the weather forecasting system,
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so it's very important that
we maintain this capability,
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and for climate purposes
it's very important
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that we maintain a
continuous record in time.
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- Apart from accurate weather data,
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it also carries a GOME
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or global ozone monitoring experiment.
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It monitors ozone concentrations
in the polar regions.
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- This is a instrument that measures
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00:08:26,011 --> 00:08:28,730
in the ultraviolet, invisible
part of the spectrum
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to retrieve information
on the ozone structure
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in the atmosphere,
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which is particularly
important for understanding
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the recovery of the ozone hole
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and also it's now used within
weather forecasting itself.
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- Weather forecasting is
important for everybody
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because weather impacts a
large amount of society,
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economic aspects.
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It impacts every day's life.
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Satellites improve weather forecasting,
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so improved forecasting enables us
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to provide earlier warnings,
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better warnings, give
us more time to warn.
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- There is now a concerted
and coordinated effort
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by the major space agencies,
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NASA, ESA, and JAXA,
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along with their international partners,
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to launch a series of next generation
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Earth observation satellites,
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each with specific instrumentation,
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to address the many variables
making up our climate.
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Joint partners NASA and
Japanese Space Agency
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have launched an international
satellite mission, GPM.
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The Global Precipitation
Measurement mission
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has set a new standard of observation
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of rain and snow worldwide.
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GPM consists of a core satellite
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with eight constellation satellites.
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With precipitation radar
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and a microwave radiometer,
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the system will collect
global data every three hours.
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- The GMI produces a
critical reference standard
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which unifies all the member satellites
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of the GPM constellation.
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00:10:08,925 --> 00:10:11,124
The instrument has 13 channels
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00:10:11,125 --> 00:10:13,605
and this greater sensitivity allows GPM
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to measure a greater variety
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of precipitation type and intensity.
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Each channel has a frequency range
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that can detect a different
type of precipitation.
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Scientific algorithms then translate
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the GMI's brightness temperature data
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into more meaningful products,
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such as rain rates.
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Because GPM's coverage
extends beyond the tropics,
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measuring storms like these
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in the mid and high latitudes
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will improve and expand the
global view of precipitation.
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- Conducted with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency
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and the space agencies of
France, India, and China,
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the GPM mission data will
advance our understanding
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of the water and energy cycles
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and extend the use of precipitation data
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to directly benefit society.
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- Two major components
of Earth's climate system
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are the water cycle and ocean circulation.
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The joint US Argentinian
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Aquarius Satélite de
Aplicaciones Científicas mission
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can map the salinity or the
concentration of dissolved salt
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00:11:24,961 --> 00:11:27,241
at the ocean's surface.
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00:11:29,920 --> 00:11:32,279
By measuring ocean salinity from space,
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Aquarius will provide new insight
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into how the massive natural exchange
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of fresh water between the
ocean, atmosphere, and sea ice
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influences ocean circulation,
weather, and climate.
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One of the oldest and most venerable
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satellite missions to date is Landsat,
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a NASA and US Geological Society project
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begun in 1972
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with the launch of the
first Landsat satellite.
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It is the longest running
contiguous Earth imaging program.
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The eighth of the series
is currently in orbit.
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00:12:07,839 --> 00:12:10,677
- It orbits over the
north and south poles,
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taking imagery on the
sunlit side of the earth
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every time it passes.
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00:12:14,959 --> 00:12:16,797
- The Landsat 8 satellite
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00:12:16,798 --> 00:12:18,516
makes 14 orbits per day
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and covers the entire globe every 16 days.
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- The data from the Landsat
data continuity mission
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will be the best data that
have ever been collected
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from a Landsat satellite.
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With increasing population,
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our land use are changing at a rate
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unprecedented in human history.
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To manage and cope with these changes,
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we need to have the observations,
the information, the data
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that allow us to
understand what's going on
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on the surface of the earth
where most of us live.
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- The data collected over 40
years of the earth's surface
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has created an historic archive
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unmatched in quality,
detail, and coverage.
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- Landsat archive that
contains all the US held data
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from all of the Landsat satellites
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00:13:06,795 --> 00:13:09,835
and the LDCM data will
become part of that archive.
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00:13:09,836 --> 00:13:12,873
- The Landsat program
offers free to anyone
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00:13:12,874 --> 00:13:15,594
the longest global record
of the earth's surface
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and it will continue to
deliver visually stunning
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and scientifically valuable
images of our planet.
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However, the earth's surface
is predominantly water,
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measuring the topography of the oceans
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is another challenge altogether.
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Begun by the TOPEX/Poseidon satellite,
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00:13:38,273 --> 00:13:39,633
a joint effort of NASA
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00:13:39,634 --> 00:13:42,393
and France's Centre
National d'Études Spatiales
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and continued by the Jason-1 satellite,
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their latest mission is Jason-2,
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continuing to provide a long
term survey of Earth's oceans.
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00:13:51,992 --> 00:13:55,232
It measures changes in the
height of the sea surface.
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00:13:55,233 --> 00:13:58,392
These are used to understand
shifts in ocean currents
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00:13:58,393 --> 00:14:00,351
as well as sea level rise,
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00:14:00,352 --> 00:14:03,791
both critical parts of
global climate change.
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00:14:03,792 --> 00:14:05,670
The data is used around the world
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00:14:05,671 --> 00:14:09,151
to improve weather, climate,
and ocean forecasts.
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00:14:10,351 --> 00:14:11,990
Another oceangoing measurement
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00:14:11,991 --> 00:14:14,671
is the speed and direction of the winds.
246
00:14:16,232 --> 00:14:18,190
The sea winds scatterometer
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00:14:18,191 --> 00:14:20,190
is a specialized microwave radar
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00:14:20,191 --> 00:14:22,750
that measures near surface wind.
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00:14:22,751 --> 00:14:25,750
The scatterometer estimates
wind speed and direction
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over the earth's oceans at 10 meters
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00:14:27,831 --> 00:14:29,870
above the surface of the water.
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00:14:30,910 --> 00:14:34,269
The instrument collects data
over ocean, land, and ice
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00:14:34,270 --> 00:14:37,430
in a continuous 1,800 kilometer wide band,
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00:14:37,431 --> 00:14:40,468
making approximately 400,000 measurements
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00:14:40,469 --> 00:14:44,390
and covering 90% of
Earth's surface in one day.
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00:14:51,230 --> 00:14:53,188
Earlier satellites could only image
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the uppermost layers of clouds.
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00:14:55,590 --> 00:14:57,628
CloudSat was among the first satellites
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00:14:57,629 --> 00:15:00,748
to study clouds on a global basis.
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00:15:00,749 --> 00:15:04,188
It looked at their structure,
composition, and effect.
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00:15:05,468 --> 00:15:07,828
The key observations are
the vertical profiles
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of cloud liquid water
and ice water contents
263
00:15:10,908 --> 00:15:14,309
and related cloud physical
and radiative properties.
264
00:15:15,147 --> 00:15:16,986
CloudSat flies in tight formation
265
00:15:16,987 --> 00:15:18,627
with the CALIPSO satellite,
266
00:15:18,628 --> 00:15:20,747
carrying a backscattering lidar,
267
00:15:20,748 --> 00:15:23,546
and these two satellites follow
behind the Aqua satellite
268
00:15:23,547 --> 00:15:25,867
in a somewhat looser formation.
269
00:15:26,628 --> 00:15:30,387
- When we started with airs on Aqua,
270
00:15:30,388 --> 00:15:34,865
we had two goals defined to
us before the mission started.
271
00:15:34,866 --> 00:15:39,065
One, provide data to the nation's
272
00:15:39,066 --> 00:15:42,985
weather forecasting center, which is NOAA,
273
00:15:42,986 --> 00:15:44,905
and improve weather forecasting.
274
00:15:44,906 --> 00:15:48,985
That was the first goal achieved
275
00:15:48,986 --> 00:15:52,825
and we, the science team, felt good.
276
00:15:52,826 --> 00:15:56,504
The second goal was improve
our understanding of
277
00:15:56,505 --> 00:15:58,104
the climate system.
278
00:15:58,105 --> 00:15:59,544
The water vapor.
279
00:15:59,545 --> 00:16:03,625
That is the main mechanism by which
280
00:16:03,626 --> 00:16:07,345
water and climate is formed here on Earth.
281
00:16:08,025 --> 00:16:10,384
- The combination of data
from the three satellites
282
00:16:10,385 --> 00:16:12,584
provides a rich source of information
283
00:16:12,585 --> 00:16:15,183
that can be used to
assess the role of clouds
284
00:16:15,184 --> 00:16:17,745
in both weather and climate.
285
00:16:26,304 --> 00:16:29,623
- The European Space Agency's
Earth Explorer program
286
00:16:29,624 --> 00:16:32,542
has seen several high tech
satellites play their part
287
00:16:32,543 --> 00:16:35,303
in our understanding
of the global climate.
288
00:16:35,304 --> 00:16:38,303
- We have launched
three missions meanwhile
289
00:16:38,304 --> 00:16:40,303
with fantastic results
290
00:16:40,304 --> 00:16:43,502
and we are innovative technology.
291
00:16:44,182 --> 00:16:46,981
- SMOS, the Soil, Moisture,
and Salinity satellite
292
00:16:46,982 --> 00:16:49,341
observe soil moisture over the land
293
00:16:49,342 --> 00:16:51,223
and salinity in the oceans.
294
00:16:55,423 --> 00:16:57,341
CryoSat, the ice mission,
295
00:16:57,342 --> 00:16:59,661
measure the thickness of
the massive ice sheets
296
00:16:59,662 --> 00:17:01,660
over Greenland and Antarctica
297
00:17:01,661 --> 00:17:04,021
and the marine ice in the Arctic.
298
00:17:04,022 --> 00:17:06,821
It used the sophisticated
stereo radar system
299
00:17:06,822 --> 00:17:09,060
and has helped give us
a better understanding
300
00:17:09,061 --> 00:17:12,661
of the relationship between
ice and global warming.
301
00:17:19,701 --> 00:17:21,740
GOCE measure Earth's gravity field
302
00:17:21,741 --> 00:17:24,259
with unprecedented accuracy.
303
00:17:24,260 --> 00:17:27,420
A geoid model is crucial for
deriving accurate measurements
304
00:17:27,421 --> 00:17:30,740
of ocean circulation and sea level change,
305
00:17:30,741 --> 00:17:33,740
both of which are affected
by climate change.
306
00:17:33,741 --> 00:17:36,098
This data reveal the earth to be lumpy
307
00:17:36,099 --> 00:17:38,858
and quite variable across the planet.
308
00:17:38,859 --> 00:17:41,019
It has led to a new map of the boundary
309
00:17:41,020 --> 00:17:43,899
between the earth's crust and mantle.
310
00:17:47,300 --> 00:17:49,258
Another piece in the climate puzzle,
311
00:17:49,259 --> 00:17:50,579
and a critical one,
312
00:17:50,580 --> 00:17:52,700
is the earth's magnetic field.
313
00:17:54,299 --> 00:17:57,497
- The earth's magnetic
field is our lifesaver,
314
00:17:57,498 --> 00:17:59,578
there's no doubt about this.
315
00:17:59,579 --> 00:18:02,418
This shield is basically protecting us
316
00:18:02,419 --> 00:18:05,137
from the harmful effect of the solar wind,
317
00:18:05,138 --> 00:18:06,818
these high energy particles
318
00:18:06,819 --> 00:18:09,738
that the sun is constantly
bombarding us with,
319
00:18:09,739 --> 00:18:11,776
and the shield is really essential for us
320
00:18:11,777 --> 00:18:13,536
and for our protection.
321
00:18:13,537 --> 00:18:15,976
The main magnetic field of
the earth is changing in time
322
00:18:15,977 --> 00:18:19,937
and it is weakening by a
factor of 10, 15% or so
323
00:18:19,938 --> 00:18:21,577
over the last 200 years,
324
00:18:21,578 --> 00:18:25,176
and what's actually going on
in the outer core of the planet
325
00:18:25,177 --> 00:18:27,578
is what we really try to find out.
326
00:18:28,418 --> 00:18:29,775
The magnetometer package,
327
00:18:29,776 --> 00:18:31,455
it measures the magnitude
328
00:18:31,456 --> 00:18:34,175
and also the direction of
the earth magnetic field,
329
00:18:34,176 --> 00:18:37,216
and it does so in two locations.
330
00:18:37,217 --> 00:18:40,616
One, it has an instrument
at the tip of the boom
331
00:18:40,617 --> 00:18:42,495
and also another instrument
halfway down the boom
332
00:18:42,496 --> 00:18:44,775
and together they give all
this precise information
333
00:18:44,776 --> 00:18:47,534
that we needed to decipher the secrets
334
00:18:47,535 --> 00:18:49,576
of the earth's magnetic field.
335
00:18:57,576 --> 00:18:59,774
- ESA is now developing
a new family of missions
336
00:18:59,775 --> 00:19:03,535
called Sentinels as part of
their Copernicus program.
337
00:19:05,174 --> 00:19:08,333
- It is not sufficient to monitor
338
00:19:08,334 --> 00:19:10,414
the evolution of the ice cap
339
00:19:10,415 --> 00:19:12,453
or to monitor the sea level rise
340
00:19:12,454 --> 00:19:14,614
during five years and then stop.
341
00:19:14,615 --> 00:19:17,294
We really need to monitor those things
342
00:19:17,295 --> 00:19:19,614
over a very long time period
343
00:19:19,615 --> 00:19:21,734
and this is what Copernicus will bring.
344
00:19:21,735 --> 00:19:24,852
It will bring a long term frame
345
00:19:24,853 --> 00:19:28,813
for continuous monitoring
of our environment.
346
00:19:28,814 --> 00:19:31,852
- Sentinal-1A is the first
of a two satellite mission
347
00:19:31,853 --> 00:19:35,532
that will scan land and
oceans using advanced radar
348
00:19:35,533 --> 00:19:38,694
to deliver imagery, regardless of weather.
349
00:19:39,214 --> 00:19:41,531
- Copernicus is the most ambitious
350
00:19:41,532 --> 00:19:44,572
Earth observation program to date.
351
00:19:44,573 --> 00:19:47,292
The European Space Agency
is putting together
352
00:19:47,293 --> 00:19:49,771
six families of Sentinels
353
00:19:49,772 --> 00:19:51,451
that will take care of the objectives
354
00:19:51,452 --> 00:19:53,212
of the Copernicus program.
355
00:19:53,213 --> 00:19:55,971
Monitoring the land,
356
00:19:55,972 --> 00:19:58,130
the mudding environment,
357
00:19:58,131 --> 00:19:59,371
the atmosphere,
358
00:19:59,372 --> 00:20:00,691
climate change,
359
00:20:00,692 --> 00:20:02,250
and providing a fast response
360
00:20:02,251 --> 00:20:04,331
to security and emergencies.
361
00:20:05,292 --> 00:20:07,970
- In total, there will
be six Sentinel missions,
362
00:20:07,971 --> 00:20:12,012
each pair of satellites devoted
to specific observations.
363
00:20:12,891 --> 00:20:15,810
- Each Sentinel has a specific duty.
364
00:20:15,811 --> 00:20:18,610
Sentinel-1 is more specifically tailored
365
00:20:18,611 --> 00:20:21,410
to emergency response,
366
00:20:21,411 --> 00:20:25,810
Sentinel-2 is focused on
monitoring of the land,
367
00:20:25,811 --> 00:20:29,210
Sentinel-3 together with Sentinel-6
368
00:20:29,211 --> 00:20:33,369
is focused on the monitoring
of the ocean and waters.
369
00:20:33,370 --> 00:20:36,289
Sentinel-4 together with Sentinel-5
370
00:20:36,290 --> 00:20:40,449
especially tailored to the
monitoring of the atmosphere.
371
00:20:42,210 --> 00:20:43,768
- The International Space Station
372
00:20:43,769 --> 00:20:47,049
is also host to several climate centers.
373
00:20:55,488 --> 00:20:59,127
Currently the CATS or
Cloud-Aerosol Transport System
374
00:20:59,128 --> 00:21:02,208
is mounted on the Japanese
experiment module.
375
00:21:02,209 --> 00:21:05,408
Using blank detection and
a ranging lidar system,
376
00:21:05,409 --> 00:21:08,607
it detects and measures
pollution, dust, smoke,
377
00:21:08,608 --> 00:21:11,728
and other aerosols in the atmosphere.
378
00:21:13,408 --> 00:21:15,446
NASA will be installing
another instrument,
379
00:21:15,447 --> 00:21:16,766
the RapidScat,
380
00:21:16,767 --> 00:21:20,207
onto the end of the station's
Columbus module this year.
381
00:21:20,208 --> 00:21:23,766
It will measure ocean surface
wind speed and direction
382
00:21:23,767 --> 00:21:27,287
and help improve forecasting
and hurricane warnings.
383
00:21:29,727 --> 00:21:32,845
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory
was NASA's first satellite
384
00:21:32,846 --> 00:21:36,006
dedicated to the tracking
of carbon in the atmosphere,
385
00:21:36,007 --> 00:21:39,525
how it is reabsorbed into
the biomass and where.
386
00:21:39,526 --> 00:21:42,206
Unfortunately, a launch failure has caused
387
00:21:42,207 --> 00:21:44,606
a reschedule of the project.
388
00:21:47,606 --> 00:21:49,084
- But we need the measurements
389
00:21:49,085 --> 00:21:51,605
that spacecraft like OCO will make
390
00:21:51,606 --> 00:21:54,844
in order to understand
the processes controlling
391
00:21:54,845 --> 00:21:57,925
the rate of buildup of carbon
dioxide in our atmosphere
392
00:21:57,926 --> 00:22:00,925
so that we can understand how
it will change in the future.
393
00:22:00,926 --> 00:22:03,284
- Other projects in motion include
394
00:22:03,285 --> 00:22:05,804
the Atmospheric Dynamics Mission Aeolus
395
00:22:05,805 --> 00:22:07,724
with its high powered UV laser
396
00:22:07,725 --> 00:22:09,963
which will measure wind
speed, air moisture,
397
00:22:09,964 --> 00:22:11,404
and dust particles
398
00:22:11,405 --> 00:22:14,805
to advance our understanding
of atmospheric dynamics.
399
00:22:16,164 --> 00:22:17,963
EarthCARE will study how the earth
400
00:22:17,964 --> 00:22:20,043
reflects and traps heat.
401
00:22:20,883 --> 00:22:24,284
Biomass will study the state
of the earth's forests.
402
00:22:25,163 --> 00:22:26,842
NASA's CLARREO satellite
403
00:22:26,843 --> 00:22:28,803
will measure incident solar irradiance
404
00:22:28,804 --> 00:22:31,163
and the earth energy budget.
405
00:22:32,123 --> 00:22:35,003
SMAP, the Soil Moisture Active Passive,
406
00:22:35,004 --> 00:22:36,682
is an earth satellite mission
407
00:22:36,683 --> 00:22:39,241
designed to measure and
map earth soil moisture
408
00:22:39,242 --> 00:22:41,041
and freeze thaw state
409
00:22:41,042 --> 00:22:43,402
to better understand terrestrial water,
410
00:22:43,403 --> 00:22:45,962
carbon, and energy cycles.
411
00:22:47,283 --> 00:22:49,282
The suite of satellites now in orbit
412
00:22:49,283 --> 00:22:52,161
and planned for the near
future will be able to peer
413
00:22:52,162 --> 00:22:55,801
beneath the clouds, vegetation,
and other surface features,
414
00:22:55,802 --> 00:22:57,520
monitor water salinity,
415
00:22:57,521 --> 00:22:59,520
temperature and energy fluxes,
416
00:22:59,521 --> 00:23:01,240
chart ocean currents,
417
00:23:01,241 --> 00:23:03,602
and the change in ice caps.
418
00:23:04,481 --> 00:23:06,320
All this data is helping to improve
419
00:23:06,321 --> 00:23:08,440
our understanding of climate change
420
00:23:08,441 --> 00:23:10,840
and also helping in a practical sense,
421
00:23:10,841 --> 00:23:12,920
with flood and drought monitoring,
422
00:23:12,921 --> 00:23:14,879
hurricane and cyclone warnings,
423
00:23:14,880 --> 00:23:17,600
understanding changes
in water availability,
424
00:23:17,601 --> 00:23:20,759
food production, and the
other societal impacts
425
00:23:20,760 --> 00:23:22,840
of climate change.
33381
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