Tour 2022: NASA's Upcoming Earth Missions
Narration: Kathleen Gaeta, Katie Jepson, Katy Mersmann, Jefferson Beck
Transcript:
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This year,
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NASA is looking to answer some of the most pressing questions we have about
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our planet, measuring things like sea and land surface temperatures,
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rainfall, our water resources, storm system precipitation
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structure, and much more, from space. Buckle
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your seatbelts, for a whirlwind tour of Earth-observing satellites launching to
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low-Earth orbit in 2022.
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[seagull noises]
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Daydreaming of a trip to the lake?
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SWOT focuses on the planet’s most precious resource: Water. The Surface Water
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and Ocean Topography mission will help researchers compile the first global
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survey of Earth's surface freshwater and study our changing ocean
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and coasts. It will use a new radar instrument to measure the elevation
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of water in major lakes, rivers, and wetlands as well as the ocean.
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SWOT’s water height data helps track regional sea level changes,
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observe small-scale ocean currents and eddies,
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monitor coastal processes, and assess water resources
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on land. With a warming climate, an inventory of Earth’s freshwater
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storage and an understanding of sea level rise’s effects on coastal communities
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is essential in order to help decision-makers manage their water
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resources and plan for hazardous events.
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[ocean waves]
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Nothing can ruin a vacation quite
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like stormy weather. Luckily, NASA
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is launching TROPICS, a collection of six small satellites
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specially designed to help scientists better understand damaging
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tropical storms and hurricanes.
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These small but mighty satellites each have a miniaturized microwave
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radiometer that peers through clouds and inside developing storms.
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Traveling in pairs in three different orbits,
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TROPICS will provide near-hourly observations of a storm's
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precipitation, temperature, and humidity.
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Collectively, TROPICS will be able to observe Earth’s surface more frequently
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than current weather satellites making similar measurements. This will give scientists
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and forecasters more data to help them understand how
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damaging tropical storms form, grow, and intensify.
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In June 2021, the TROPICS first proof of concept
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satellite launched, collecting important data that showed the promise
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of these small satellites to help us prepare for the weather ahead.
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[wind noises]
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There’s more to dust than meets the eye. Winds on Earth
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kick up millions of tons of dust every year, and where that dust goes
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matters! Nutrient-rich dust from the Sahara Desert, for example,
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is blown across the Atlantic Ocean where it fertilizes the Amazon rainforest.
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But dust in the atmosphere can also reflect or trap additional heat
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close to Earth’s surface, depending on its color and composition
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– exacerbating or diminishing the greenhouse effect.
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That’s where EMIT comes in. The Earth surface Mineral dust source InvesTigation
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will use spectroscopy – a process that splits light into a spectrum of wavelengths,
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which can be used to “fingerprint” different types of materials, including dust.
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In this way, EMIT will observe the mineral composition of Earth’s dust
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from its perch on the International Space Station. EMIT’s data
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will help scientists map the areas on Earth that produce different types of dust,
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and help them better understand the behavior of all that dust in the wind.
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[wind noises]
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For the last decade, a wealth of essential data has been streaming
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back to Earth from satellites in the Joint Polar Satellite System,
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a collaboration between NASA and NOAA.
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Onboard suites of instruments measure … nearly
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everything you can think of. Over land, they measure vegetation,
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fires, droughts, snowfall, and ice cover,
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just to name a few. Over the oceans – sea surface temperatures
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and algal blooms. And in the atmosphere –
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clouds, rainfall, heat, smoke, dust storms,
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ozone, and air quality. These data feed
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our daily weather forecasts, helping weather models see further
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into the future to predict severe weather like hurricanes, tornadoes,
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and snow storms, and monitor our changing climate.
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In 2022, NASA and NOAA will launch
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JPSS-2, the next mighty bird in the JPSS
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program. JPSS-2 and its successors
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will carry on the decades-long Earth-observing legacy
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through 2038.
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Stay tuned...
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NASA