NASA Interview Opportunity: Celebrate Earth Day With A Global Pulse Check Of Our Oceans! See Our Oceans In A Whole New Light

  • Released Monday, April 15, 2024

Join a NASA expert on April 22, 2024 to talk about Earth Day 2024 Celebrations sprinkled with ocean science!

Scroll down the page for the associated cut b-roll for the live shots. Pre-recorded soundbites will be posted on Sunday, April 21. Click here for the NEW material. Click on links below for latest stories:The Ocean Touches Everything: Celebrate Earth Day with NASANASA’s PACE Data on Ocean, Atmosphere, Climate Now Available

Scroll down the page for the associated cut b-roll for the live shots. Pre-recorded soundbites will be posted on Sunday, April 21.

Click here for the NEW material.

Click on links below for latest stories:

The Ocean Touches Everything: Celebrate Earth Day with NASA

NASA’s PACE Data on Ocean, Atmosphere, Climate Now Available


Earth Day, coming up on Monday, April 22, is a time to admire, celebrate and protect our home planet. Earth’s beauty is not only defined by its breath-taking landscapes but also by its vast oceans that cover more than 70 percent of our planet’s surface! This Earth Day let’s take a deep dive into ocean health through the lens of NASA’s newest satellite called PACE. Since its launch in February 2024, NASA’s Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem satellite - or PACE - is ushering in a new era of ocean science from the atmosphere down to the surface of the ocean.

Chat one-on-one with NASA experts this Earth Day. Find out how your viewers can join NASA in celebrating our blue planet, and see the latest images and hear about the first data on Earth’s oceans and atmosphere from the PACE satellite.

Live and taped interviews are available Monday, April 22 from 6 a.m. - 1 p.m. EST
Click here to request an interview: https://forms.gle/jdSW2GedM4TrMvjMA
Requests sent via the above form will have scheduling priority. Please do not email requests.
For more information about NASA’s Earth science missions and research check out: nasa.gov/earth and @NASAEarth on social media.
* For more about the PACE mission click here: nasa.gov/pace

Suggested Anchor Intro:
Today is Earth Day, an annual global celebration of our home planet. As we celebrate Earth today, let's raise awareness about the importance of protecting our fragile planet. Join us for a deep dive into Earth’s stunning oceans.

Joining us now is NASA expert xxx to help us celebrate Earth Day and give us the inside scoop on what NASA is learning about our home planet!

Suggested questions:
1. This Earth Day NASA is focused on the oceans. NASA’s PACE satellite is looking at the color of the oceans around the globe. What exactly is “ocean color” and what does it tell us about ocean health?
2. We hear that NASA’s newest Earth observing satellite called PACE has the newest view of Earth’s oceans from space. Can you tell us about PACE and walk us through this new imagery?
3. PACE is also tracking small particles in our atmosphere - like smoke from wildfires. Why do we want to measure these tiny things from space?
4. 2023 was a year of extremes across the globe including being the warmest year on record. In our area we experienced _____. Can you talk about how this fits into the longer term climate trends you’re seeing?
* Droughts
* Flooding
* Temperatures
* Wildfires
* Heavy snow
* Extreme storms
4. How will you be celebrating Earth day today?
5. Where can our viewers learn more about Earth Day and NASA Earth day activities?

Questions for longer interviews:
6. Why is it important to understand the impact of climate change on our oceans?
7. It’s only April and already we’re seeing warmer than average temperatures on land and in the oceans. How might this impact hurricane season that starts up in just a few months?

Canned soundbites with Dr Dalia Kirschbaum / Director of Earth Sciences at a Goddard Space Flight Center. TRT 628. Full transcript available under the download button.

Soundbites are separated by a slate with the following questions:

1. This Earth Day NASA is focused on the oceans. NASA’s PACE satellite is looking at the color of the oceans around the globe. What exactly is “ocean color” and what does it tell us about ocean health?

2. We hear that NASA’s newest Earth observing satellite called PACE has the newest view of Earth’s oceans from space. Can you tell us about PACE and walk us through this new imagery?

3. PACE is also tracking small particles in our atmosphere - like smoke from wildfires. Why do we want to measure these tiny things from space?

4. 2023 was a year of extremes across the globe including being the warmest year on record. Can you talk about how this fits into the longer term climate trends you’re seeing?

5. How will you be celebrating Earth day?

6. Why is it important to understand the impact of climate change on our oceans?

7. Why does NASA study Earth?

8. Where can our viewers learn more about Earth Day and NASA Earth day activities?

Canned soundbites wtih Dr Jeremy Wardell / PACE Project Scientist. TRT 3:16. Full transcript available under the download button.

Soundbites are separated by slates with the following questions.

1. This Earth Day NASA is focused on the oceans. NASA’s PACE satellite is looking at the color of the oceans around the globe. What exactly is “ocean color” and what does it tell us about ocean health?

2. We hear that NASA’s newest Earth observing satellite called PACE has the newest view of Earth’s oceans from space. Can you tell us about PACE and walk us through this new imagery?

3. PACE is also tracking small particles in our atmosphere - like smoke from wildfires. Why do we want to measure these tiny things from space?

4. 2023 was a year of extremes across the globe including being the warmest year on record. Can you talk about how this fits into the longer term climate trends you’re seeing?

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Credits

Please give credit for this item to:
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Release date

This page was originally published on Monday, April 15, 2024.
This page was last updated on Monday, April 22, 2024 at 7:33 AM EDT.


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