1 00:00:03,230 --> 00:00:04,570 Here at the end of the Earth 2 00:00:04,570 --> 00:00:08,260 it still feels like a place for raw exploration and adventure. 3 00:00:08,260 --> 00:00:09,570 4 00:00:09,570 --> 00:00:12,880 It’s vast in all directions and ground zero for some of the 5 00:00:12,880 --> 00:00:15,120 biggest questions we have about the climate. 6 00:00:15,120 --> 00:00:16,570 7 00:00:16,570 --> 00:00:20,150 But when we decided to make a series about the frozen places on Earth, 8 00:00:20,150 --> 00:00:24,020 we knew there would be one hurdle we’d need to jump over first: 9 00:00:24,020 --> 00:00:24,620 10 00:00:24,620 --> 00:00:27,790 What is the cryosphere? 11 00:00:27,790 --> 00:00:29,320 The what? 12 00:00:29,320 --> 00:00:30,190 Ummm 13 00:00:30,190 --> 00:00:32,250 Oooh 14 00:00:32,250 --> 00:00:35,530 I don't know - I have no idea 15 00:00:35,530 --> 00:00:40,270 While I'm aware of the cryosphere, I don't actually know what it is 16 00:00:40,270 --> 00:00:44,540 It has something to do with ice 17 00:00:44,540 --> 00:00:47,300 Alright, that's all I got 18 00:00:47,300 --> 00:00:49,780 How do you get people acquainted with the cryosphere 19 00:00:49,780 --> 00:00:52,240 when most of us don’t know what it is? 20 00:00:52,240 --> 00:01:03,060 21 00:01:03,060 --> 00:01:07,200 NASA Explorers 22 00:01:07,200 --> 00:01:08,530 Introducing Season One 23 00:01:08,530 --> 00:01:11,650 24 00:01:11,650 --> 00:01:16,310 CRYOSPHERE 25 00:01:16,310 --> 00:01:23,230 26 00:01:23,230 --> 00:01:25,940 The Big Thaw 27 00:01:25,940 --> 00:01:27,710 Episode One 28 00:01:27,710 --> 00:01:28,880 29 00:01:28,880 --> 00:01:33,000 Washington, D.C. 30 00:01:33,000 --> 00:01:36,960 Hey, so here we are in Washington, D.C standing on the roof of NASA Headquarters. 31 00:01:36,960 --> 00:01:40,170 That’s the capitol building right behind me and what Headquarters does 32 00:01:40,170 --> 00:01:43,140 is kinda serve as the focal point to connect the dots. 33 00:01:43,140 --> 00:01:48,710 That’s Dr. Tom Wagner- NASA’s Cryospheric Program Scientist at Headquarters. 34 00:01:48,710 --> 00:01:54,040 In short – Tom is responsible for making sure NASA knows what the current status of the cryosphere is. 35 00:01:54,040 --> 00:01:57,800 The cryosphere is everything from the snow that falls by your house 36 00:01:57,800 --> 00:02:03,620 to the icy reaches of the Himalayas to the big, big, big ice sheets of Antarctica 37 00:02:03,620 --> 00:02:07,290 all the way at the south pole and also the frozen ground of the Arctic, 38 00:02:07,290 --> 00:02:10,800 and even some of that frozen ground that’s currently under the ocean. 39 00:02:10,800 --> 00:02:11,350 40 00:02:11,350 --> 00:02:14,010 If you had to break it down, you’d have a mix of 41 00:02:14,010 --> 00:02:14,880 Sea ice 42 00:02:14,880 --> 00:02:16,210 Snow cover 43 00:02:16,210 --> 00:02:17,120 Permafrost 44 00:02:17,120 --> 00:02:18,210 Ice sheets 45 00:02:18,210 --> 00:02:19,640 and Glaciers 46 00:02:19,640 --> 00:02:23,530 47 00:02:23,530 --> 00:02:26,000 Right now, our best predictions are that sea levels 48 00:02:26,000 --> 00:02:29,510 will rise anywhere from one to three feet in the next hundred years. 49 00:02:29,510 --> 00:02:33,970 Three feet of sea level rise has the potential to displace about a hundred million people, 50 00:02:33,970 --> 00:02:36,550 which is a lot of people that need to find new homes. 51 00:02:36,550 --> 00:02:37,380 52 00:02:37,380 --> 00:02:40,690 Our current reality places us at a near tipping point. 53 00:02:40,690 --> 00:02:44,400 And the cryosphere is playing a huge part in that delicate balance. 54 00:02:44,400 --> 00:02:45,130 55 00:02:45,130 --> 00:02:48,230 So, one of the things people don’t know about NASA is that we study the Earth 56 00:02:48,230 --> 00:02:51,860 and we’ve been doing that since NASA’s inception back in the 1950s. 57 00:02:51,860 --> 00:02:55,340 And we study the frozen part of the Earth in a variety of ways. 58 00:02:55,340 --> 00:02:56,140 59 00:02:56,140 --> 00:02:57,640 Missions like SnowEx, 60 00:02:57,640 --> 00:02:59,520 Airborne Snow Observatory 61 00:02:59,520 --> 00:03:00,730 Oceans Meting Greenland 62 00:03:00,730 --> 00:03:01,840 Operation IceBridge 63 00:03:01,840 --> 00:03:03,670 Arctic – Boreal Vulnerability Experiment 64 00:03:03,670 --> 00:03:06,470 and countless other labs and individual researchers 65 00:03:06,470 --> 00:03:09,760 stand at the forefront of monitoring the cryosphere. 66 00:03:09,760 --> 00:03:10,840 67 00:03:10,840 --> 00:03:14,000 But this year was a particularly big year. 68 00:03:14,000 --> 00:03:20,050 3...2...1...and liftoff 69 00:03:20,050 --> 00:03:24,810 of GRACE Follow On continuing the legacy of the GRACE mission 70 00:03:24,810 --> 00:03:28,940 of tracking the movement of water across our planet. 71 00:03:28,940 --> 00:03:31,150 72 00:03:31,150 --> 00:03:34,850 Two state-of-the-art satellite missions are being launched in a single year 73 00:03:34,850 --> 00:03:38,980 as part of a major attempt to understand Earth’s frozen places. 74 00:03:38,980 --> 00:03:41,030 75 00:03:41,030 --> 00:03:43,680 Our scientists are answering hard questions 76 00:03:43,680 --> 00:03:45,250 sharing stories from the field, 77 00:03:45,250 --> 00:03:50,030 and giving their best predictions for what we can expect of a warming world. 78 00:03:50,030 --> 00:03:54,500 79 00:03:54,500 --> 00:03:57,400 We’re taking you with us as we follow NASA explorers 80 00:03:57,400 --> 00:03:59,310 on their journey to the frozen ends of the Earth 81 00:03:59,310 --> 00:04:05,520 as they study our rapidly changing world from satellites, planes and boots on the ground. 82 00:04:05,520 --> 00:04:07,010 83 00:04:07,010 --> 00:04:10,680 CRYOSPHERE 84 00:04:10,680 --> 00:04:11,890 85 00:04:11,890 --> 00:04:14,420 On the next episode of CRYOSPHERE 86 00:04:14,420 --> 00:04:15,700 87 00:04:15,700 --> 00:04:18,080 What we can do really well from orbit is 88 00:04:18,080 --> 00:04:21,580 we can tell when a surface of land is covered in snow 89 00:04:21,580 --> 00:04:24,870 What's tricky is though, how thick is that snow 90 00:04:24,870 --> 00:04:28,340 and it's even trickier how much water is in that snow 91 00:04:28,340 --> 00:04:29,520 92 00:04:29,520 --> 00:04:32,740 Episode Two: Snow 93 00:04:32,740 --> 00:04:35,642