WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:02.669 --> 00:00:04.637 Radio Chatter: PPA is engaged 2 00:00:04.804 --> 00:00:06.706 Radio Chatter: And we're radiating. 3 00:00:06.706 --> 00:00:09.509 Narration: One of the best ways to track how an environment is changing 4 00:00:09.509 --> 00:00:11.411 is to observe it from above. 5 00:00:11.411 --> 00:00:12.078 But where weather 6 00:00:12.078 --> 00:00:15.482 and vegetation can make it difficult to see the ground with the naked eye, 7 00:00:15.949 --> 00:00:19.352 specialized radar can pierce the clouds to give us a crystal clear 8 00:00:19.352 --> 00:00:21.087 look at the landscape. 9 00:00:21.087 --> 00:00:23.823 This special device - weighing nearly 1.000 lbs - 10 00:00:24.157 --> 00:00:27.827 collects data about soil moisture, vegetation, permafrost 11 00:00:27.827 --> 00:00:30.397 and other environmental processes on the ground below. 12 00:00:30.697 --> 00:00:34.234 In fact, it's so precise that NASA developed a special system 13 00:00:34.234 --> 00:00:37.837 for pilots to fly the exact same flight path year after year 14 00:00:38.204 --> 00:00:41.841 to get an accurate reading as to how a landscape is changing over time. 15 00:00:41.908 --> 00:00:45.678 Dr. Hoy: So with the airborne data, we can target exactly where we want to go 16 00:00:45.678 --> 00:00:47.614 and exactly when we want to go there. 17 00:00:47.614 --> 00:00:50.984 And we get very high resolution data so we can have a really clear picture 18 00:00:50.984 --> 00:00:51.985 of what's on the ground. 19 00:00:51.985 --> 00:00:52.719 Narration: That's Dr. Liz Hoy, 20 00:00:52.719 --> 00:00:55.922 Senior Scientist for NASA's ABoVE Mission. 21 00:00:56.322 --> 00:00:59.859 ABoVE has spent the last seven years studying environmental changes 22 00:00:59.859 --> 00:01:01.394 in the Arctic and boreal regions. 23 00:01:02.328 --> 00:01:04.831 The mission uses satellite, airborne and ground data 24 00:01:04.831 --> 00:01:08.034 to get a complete picture of what is unfolding in these ecosystems. 25 00:01:08.768 --> 00:01:12.072 Dr. Hoy: So our satellite data gives us a very broad picture of what's happening 26 00:01:12.072 --> 00:01:13.773 all over the landscape. 27 00:01:13.773 --> 00:01:15.375 And then with our airborne data, 28 00:01:15.375 --> 00:01:19.345 we can target specific locations and times when we want to get imagery. 29 00:01:19.646 --> 00:01:22.649 And then we can compare both our satellite and our airborne data 30 00:01:22.649 --> 00:01:24.084 with what's happening on the ground. 31 00:01:24.084 --> 00:01:27.220 And we have teams actually out on the ground making measurements. 32 00:01:27.220 --> 00:01:28.788 And putting all that together 33 00:01:28.788 --> 00:01:32.459 is really where we get a lot of the power of what we're able to study. 34 00:01:33.126 --> 00:01:35.261 Narration: And it all gets put together in Alaska.