WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.060 --> 00:00:04.250 [music] Narrator: NASA’s airborne surveys are 2 00:00:04.270 --> 00:00:08.460 are giving scientists astonishingly accurate views of how 3 00:00:08.480 --> 00:00:12.650 Greenland’s glaciers are changing. 4 00:00:12.670 --> 00:00:16.740 Laser altimeters map the very details of glacier surfaces 5 00:00:16.760 --> 00:00:20.870 and flights spanning two decades reveal the dramatic changes 6 00:00:20.890 --> 00:00:25.070 that have taken place. 7 00:00:25.090 --> 00:00:29.250 [atmospheric music] 8 00:00:29.270 --> 00:00:33.440 On Greenland’s rugged eastern coast, spilling into 9 00:00:33.460 --> 00:00:37.630 a mountainous fjord, lies the four-mile-wide 10 00:00:37.650 --> 00:00:41.840 Helheim Glacier, named for the Viking world of the dead. 11 00:00:41.860 --> 00:00:46.070 It’s had a wild ride over the last 20 years, 12 00:00:46.090 --> 00:00:50.260 first rapidly retreating and thinning, then partially recovering 13 00:00:50.280 --> 00:00:54.510 its former extent. NASA science 14 00:00:54.530 --> 00:00:58.690 missions have flown the glacier’s center line year after year, 15 00:00:58.710 --> 00:01:02.780 collecting a wealth of valuable data. 16 00:01:02.800 --> 00:01:06.820 It all begins 17 00:01:06.840 --> 00:01:10.870 with a single beam of light. 18 00:01:10.890 --> 00:01:15.050 Firing several thousand pulses per second, laser instruments on board 19 00:01:15.070 --> 00:01:19.100 research aircraft measure the height of the surface below. 20 00:01:19.120 --> 00:01:23.240 21 00:01:23.260 --> 00:01:27.460 The lasers spin in a 22 00:01:27.480 --> 00:01:31.540 250 meter circle. providing a swath of data that can be 23 00:01:31.560 --> 00:01:35.660 turned into a topographic map of the ice. 24 00:01:35.680 --> 00:01:39.860 25 00:01:39.880 --> 00:01:44.050 Here we’ve shown higher elevations 26 00:01:44.070 --> 00:01:48.210 in red and orange, and lower elevations in green and blue, 27 00:01:48.230 --> 00:01:52.270 all the way down to the glacier’s calving front – 28 00:01:52.290 --> 00:01:56.450 where Helheim’s mighty icebergs break off into the sea. 29 00:01:56.470 --> 00:02:00.520 But one snapshot 30 00:02:00.540 --> 00:02:04.600 only tells part of the story. Here’s a 1998 31 00:02:04.620 --> 00:02:08.770 swath compared with 2013. 32 00:02:08.790 --> 00:02:12.960 We’ve changed the color scale to highlight the local 33 00:02:12.980 --> 00:02:17.060 differences in elevation. 34 00:02:17.080 --> 00:02:21.270 We’re now moving below the surface of the ice as it was in 1998, 35 00:02:21.290 --> 00:02:25.450 and over the mélange of icebergs and ocean that were present in the same spot 36 00:02:25.470 --> 00:02:29.480 in 2013. The calving front of the glacier 37 00:02:29.500 --> 00:02:33.660 has retreated significantly, by two and half miles. 38 00:02:33.680 --> 00:02:37.880 The glacier has thinned as well. We couldn't have flown at this elevation 39 00:02:37.900 --> 00:02:42.050 15 years ago. This all would have been ice. 40 00:02:42.070 --> 00:02:46.230 NASA’s Operation IceBridge, which has been measuring Greenland 41 00:02:46.250 --> 00:02:50.420 since 2009, has added to the laser data from previous missions 42 00:02:50.440 --> 00:02:54.680 with new instruments like ice penetrating radar, 43 00:02:54.700 --> 00:02:58.740 a magnetometer, and a gravimeter. It’s also used a 44 00:02:58.760 --> 00:03:02.860 high-resolution camera system, taking overlapping images of the ice 45 00:03:02.880 --> 00:03:06.920 throughout its eight-hour flights. 46 00:03:06.940 --> 00:03:11.100 These images can be pieced together 47 00:03:11.120 --> 00:03:15.260 into a mosaic, and since they overlap, provide us with a 48 00:03:15.280 --> 00:03:19.420 stereoscopic view of the ice, and an elevation model of their own. 49 00:03:19.440 --> 00:03:23.510 Here is that model overlaid onto the laser data, 50 00:03:23.530 --> 00:03:27.640 as we approach Helheim’s 70 meter high calving front. 51 00:03:27.660 --> 00:03:31.750 As we get 52 00:03:31.770 --> 00:03:35.940 close to the glacier’s terminus, large cracks in the ice, called crevasses 53 00:03:35.960 --> 00:03:40.130 get longer and deeper, a sign new icebergs 54 00:03:40.150 --> 00:03:44.280 will soon join their comrades on their way out to sea. 55 00:03:44.300 --> 00:03:48.460 Until the launch of a 56 00:03:48.480 --> 00:03:52.680 new NASA satellite, ICESat-2, Operation IceBridge 57 00:03:52.700 --> 00:03:56.710 will return to Greenland every spring to continue measurements 58 00:03:56.730 --> 00:04:00.860 of this large and ever-changing glacier. 59 00:04:00.880 --> 00:04:04.940 [beep beep] 60 00:04:04.960 --> 00:04:10.864 [beep beep, beep beep]