Kind: captions Language: en greetings earthlings who are so tired of being stuck at home and hearing the same political headlines over and over again let's switch it all up and talk about space history making link up in orbit as the spacex crew and the dragon today the first round of u.s space force enlistees graduated right here in san antonio and there's a piece of technology we all rely on that's really shifted how we both explore and exploit space iran's revolutionary guard says the country is now able to quote monitor the world from space china says it has sent the world's first 6g experiment satellite into space south korea's first military communications satellite was launched into space in california people living near vandenberg air force base were warned today about sonic booms this falcon 9 rocket carried a satellite into orbit that will monitor sea levels what's lurking up there in the sky satellites extremely complex packages of engineering that give us almost limitless benefits like watching tv tracking the weather finding our way home making calls around the world exploring outer space they basically deserve a really big thank you for making our sheltered and place lives manageable there are about 6 000 satellites orbiting earth right now and of those nearly half are still operational just this year humankind has launched hundreds of satellites with flags from every continent except antarctica maybe that'll change i don't know what's up penguins and we even have more than a dozen orbiting mars mars so straight up we need to give you the dish on satellites get it i'm funny but for real they're an integral part of our modern world and help us understand our planet and ourselves this is nova now where we explore all the celestial far out science behind the headlines and this astronomical body we call planet earth i'm alok patel you often hear the statement well humans aren't big enough or powerful enough to affect something like the earth's atmosphere or the land surface and yet you can look at the record and see that transition occurring through land use and urbanization and so forth jeffrey g massik who goes by jeff is a project scientist for landsat 9 at nasa's goddard space flight center i think when we look at that we realize that we're a lot more powerful than we think we are in our ability to change the environment the landsat program is a collaboration between the u.s geological survey and nasa in 1972 a satellite was launched which will help to manage world agriculture landsat beginning with landsat 1 the program's launched a total of eight satellites since the early 70s providing the longest continuous space-based record of the surface of the earth we acquire imagery of aldera's land and coastal areas every eight days so we've assembled this long record of how the planet has changed and that's designed to support land management decisions by governments at state local national level and individuals as well so we have five decades of right information and you know knowledge about our planet from outer space can you tell us a little bit about what we've learned about our lovely blue planet from space in general what we've seen just graphically is how dynamic the planet is in response to human activities when you grow up in an area you know your neighborhood for example you don't really notice the changes that occur over years and decades right this just kind of almost seems constant but when you run the the movie in fast motion suddenly you see all of these changes and the urbanization and the changes in forest management and all of that right i mean we see areas where agriculture suddenly goes in irrigated agriculture into desert environments for example and then we see it fade away again we see areas that convert from forests to soybean fields big areas in south america i think one of the recent real big accomplishments the program has been looking at ice sheet velocity tracking so when you look at antarctica or greenland and how they're changing response to climate warming with landsat data you're basically able to track features on the surface and and create a velocity map for the ice sheets and people are doing that year in year out now which is pretty fascinating okay so speaking of all these landsat images i'm going to look at them in real time i'm on climate.nasa.gov i'm going to compare landsat images of greenland glaciers from 1972 to 2019 here we go so off the bat it already looks like there's less glacier if you compare the two pictures i see more of the brown earth more of these like rocky peaks and this other picture it looks like the glacier is almost like not present like it's it's retreated away in this other picture there's water where there probably shouldn't be like the glacier has melted if that sounds like climate change it's because it is 25 status check go atlas go centaur go ldcm today two of the landsat satellites are still orbiting our planet landsat 7 since 1999 and landsat 8 that was launched in an atlas 5 rocket from vandenberg air force base in california in 2013. five four three two one zero at ignition and liftoff of the atlas v rocket on the landsat data continuity mission continuing the 40-year legacy of deserving earth's natural resources from space landsat 9 is the next mission it's got souped-up sensors and is scheduled for launch next year eventually it'll replace landsat 7 which is nearing the end of its life let's zoom out for a sec you know take an astronaut's view maybe a matt damon from the martian's view a satellite is an object in space that orbits around another object there's natural satellites like our moon and artificial satellites like the international space station both orbit the earth artificial satellites can be operated by governments the military commercial companies and places like universities or research centers they can be classified by their purpose there's communication satellites like the att t16 the latest in a fleet that's supporting the direct tv satellite television service there are military defense satellites those are also often imaging satellites geostationary operational environmental satellites that help meteorologists observe and predict local weather events space science satellites for research earth observation satellites like landsat and of course gps is huge gps i love gps do you know what it actually stands for it's global positioning system a navigation system that's made up of 30 satellites as of now everybody knows gps gives you your location on your cell phone and that is a satellite constellation that the us operates for anyone out there who disrespects satellites i would like you to remember the days when we used to try to drive places without our phones stopping in gas stations and asking people which direction you know is what city with the paper map atlas right yeah yeah satellites were first imagined by such visionaries as sci-fi writer arthur c clarke who in 1945 suggested if you launched an object with enough velocity it could fall into orbit around the planet it would be the soviets who would place the first human-made satellite into a low earth orbit in 1957 sputnik 1 a 23-inch metal ball that carried a thermometer batteries and a radio transmitter to space these days satellites come in all shapes and sizes not just 23-inch metal balls there are some now you know very small cubesats that can fit in the palm of your hand the landsat satellites are larger they tend to be sort of school bus sized or minivan sized the landsat satellites are remarkable feats of engineering that allow us to watch our planet it's basically an imager mounted on top of what we call a satellite bus okay so the imagers are the instruments like the camera and the satellite bus provides the life support for everything that imager has to do so this the power the solar array the fuel for maneuvers you know the antennas to bring the data down can you tell us a little bit more about the instruments walk us through the technology and how we get these incredible images from the landscape satellites so landsat images in a lot of different spectral wavelengths so our eyes see in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum landsat goes beyond that into the infrared and into what we call this thermal infrared so that's basically looking at heat coming from the earth landsat 9 and landsat 8 have two separate instruments on board the operational land imager gets to the shorter wavelengths the light comes from the sun it reflects off the surface of the earth and it arrives at a telescope that's on the instrument and basically the light bounces around it gets focused onto a focal plane which converts the light into an electrical signal which gives a measure of the brightness of the earth's surface the second one is called tears thermal infrared sensor is dedicated for the longer wavelengths for the thermal infrared so we can look at surface temperature and instead of the light coming from the sun it's basically radiation that comes from the surface temperature so it's emitted radiation from the planet itself you know corresponding to the surface temperature that again goes up to the instrument through a telescope and to the detectors this radiation is proportional to earth's surface temperature the data that the satellites image we think of them as pictures but in fact they're measurements of surface reflectance or surface temperature each satellite positions itself to capture images in direct sunlight once every 99 minutes so about 14 times a day landsat uses a 705 kilometer altitude orbit that's about 438 miles above me right now in my closet sound booth as a landsat satellite travels from the north pole to the south pole it's capturing data over a 115 mile wide swath which means a full picture of our planet is ready in a little bit more than 16 days and then the cycle starts again now i understand satellites are designed with kind of a lifetime in mind oftentimes they can go beyond that expectation how do you know when a satellite has kind of reached the end of its life and then after that what happens to them do they get a proper space burial do we just leave them up there yeah so usgs operates the satellites monitors all of the systems on board and so what we find for example is you may be running low on fuel right and if you run out of fuel you can't do the necessary maneuvers to keep the satellite in the proper orbit the gyros or reaction wheels may fail in that case you have a hard time maintaining the attitude of the satellite and that's considered dangerous because at that point you're kind of an out of control vehicle in the in the orbit and you can run into other things it's considered bad manners so when you lose enough systems then basically you make the determination to deorbit the satellite and you fire some thrusters you bring it into a lower orbit and you know there's various policies for how fast you have to deorbit a satellite but it's usually sort of decades it takes and you just let it reenter and burn up more recent satellites actually have to be actively deorbited so that you know what ground target you're going to hit when the satellite deorbits i often think about the movie gravity and space debris potentially hitting something you know do we worry about the size of earth's orbit and a potential time when it could get too crowded and those incidents could start happening so space debris is a big problem and it's an operational problem for the landsat satellites we're on occasion having to move the satellite out of the way of some piece of space debris and that interrupts the imaging cycle and so it's it's a hassle okay so perhaps that movie gravity is a little over hyped but space junk is still an issue space debris usually refers to human-made particles and it's estimated that there are more than 900 000 pieces of this stuff in orbit ranging from about half an inch to around 4 inches and there are natural objects out there as well like meteors and these can definitely be hazardous but there's a much higher likelihood of a collision with a human-made object but in general when it starts to get near the end of life we move it out of the way that's the most important thing you can do what you find is is that certain orbits are useful and certain orbits are not so used landsat is in a particular orbit called a sun synchronous orbit where every overpass is the same local time uh for imaging so this the solar illumination conditions are the same for every image which is desirable there are other orbits just above or below it that really aren't used very much and so the trick is to move the satellite out of an operational orbit into some other orbit that's not used very much where it'll be kind of out of the way satellites can be grouped together as they orbit which works well when they have a shared purpose in nasa we have something called the a train for atmospheric observations for example which has several satellites that look at the atmosphere all on a train just like a line of cars in the same lane on a highway or a line of ducklings following their mom as they're crossing that highway they do have to worry about how close they come and if there's an avoidance maneuver because there's some kind of debris coming toward the first one then they all have to kind of jump out of the way in a coordinated fashion so that's a big part of satellite maintenance the landsat program is just one of the many projects using satellites in less than a hundred years the space above us has become a place for innovation and contributions to society after the break we'll meet someone who's thinking of how space can help us improve life down here on this blue planet we're at an exciting period in the space journey where there's opportunities to put more and more satellites in space but yet we have to take care so we don't create so much debris or risk of collision in space that we actually miss the chance to use these space technologies for benefit on earth dr danielle wood is an assistant professor at the mit media lab she's also the director of the space enabled research group remember the possible issues with space junk in 2019 the world economic forum created a transdisciplinary consortium that includes space enabled and teams from the european space agency the university of texas at austin and a company called bryce space and technology they're working on the space sustainability rating a new and innovative way of addressing the orbital challenge so we're identifying actions that companies can take to earn a good rating that an operator with satellite can have a sustainable mission and for us sustainability means they're trying to avoid colliding with other missions they're trying to avoid being debris meaning leaving their mission as trash and orbit for a long time after they're finished so we want to give basically a score to any group from government or companies or universities and to celebrate those who are doing their best to reduce debris what's interesting though a lot of people want to go basically to the same place in space because they're interested in operating for similar activities and the physics means that you might want to go somewhere near another neighbor of yours and is there an organization that kind of centralizes the authorization for satellites or is it just up to other countries other space programs to follow the rating scale or to apply for it or to you know pay attention to it so the first thing you need to know is that anytime an object is launched to space every satellite in every rocket is launched by a country meaning it's under the authority of a certain country so it's very good that we already have national laws that review the plans for space missions before they go to space and each object that goes to space whether it's a satellite or a rocket or an instrument has been applied to make sure they're following the standards of that particular country so on one hand the space sustainability rating is not trying to replace national regulations or national processes of giving licenses for satellites and rockets what we are actually trying to do is encourage arthritis of satellites to even go beyond what's required by their country so we'll give even you know a better score if a mission does better than what's required by the law the consortium is sharing the rating system with countries around the world so national governments can choose to include it as one of the items they consider when deciding whether to approve the launch of a new satellite and when it starts the rating will be voluntary this work has some history behind it i am very thankful about what happened in the early years of the space era danielle wood is a scholar of societal development with a background that includes satellite design earth science applications systems engineering and technology policy because this was also a period of the cold war and it was not obvious whether countries would come together to make a peaceful approach to working in space or whether instead we would actually make worse some of the tensions that were already in place between especially the united states and the soviet union we could have really seen space programs lead to further aggressions and perhaps even another world war but instead we saw countries come together and identify the fact that space is another global commons just like we see with the oceans antarctica places that really belong to all humans equally not in particular countries in 1967 the outer space treaty was open for signature in the united states the united kingdom and the russian federation it provided the basic framework for international space law the outer space treaty establishes a key principle which says that space is the common heritage of all humankind and therefore it should not be a place for one particular country or company which be a place that we consider a shared opportunity so whoever is acting in space now is really in a sense a steward of it for those who might use in the future not just for their own current needs the treaty was the first of five organized by the united nations committee on the peaceful uses of outer space and has now been signed by more than a hundred countries from every region including latin america and all over africa and southeast asia and eastern europe and the caribbean so there really is a mix of countries around the world helping to shape the current debates around space policy and playing a role in deciding how and where we operate in space and under what conditions we do so and when you think about the intersection between space and justice there's kind of three big questions one is what has been the legacy how has technology played a role in either advancing or reducing justice the second is what do we see today in terms of today's space technology and is it being used uh sort of uniformly around the world to serve people and make sure that they have what they need from the benefits of space and the third is as we look to the future and we expand have more people living and working in space over the long term we want to ask what justice look like for the kind of communities we're going to create so in my class in the fall i teach my students to read some key history from the last 500 years and to really engage with the reality of colonization and slavery and mismanagement of power by countries toward other countries and by groups like different racial groups to other groups and we asked the question what have we done wrong in our human history recently that we should not carry forward into space the anti-colonial view says let me consider that what i do in a global commons a place that's shared by different countries is not just up to my country and my country's benefit but should be done in a way that considers future generations and asks what are the concerns of other stakeholders other countries other indigenous groups that may have certain views i think that concept of people acting in in researching space are stewards for the future is an important one and i really respect how you frame space technology in a way that should benefit everyone and so you know i want to ask you if you could give us some examples of space technology that's been developed that supports and encourages sustainable development on earth the united nations has an excellent job curating sustainable development goals as an aspirational list of the ways we all need to work together to change the world 17 sustainable development goals are at the heart of the un's 2030 agenda for sustainable development that quote provides a shared blueprint for peace and prosperity for people in the planet now and into the future they recognize that ending poverty in other deprivations must go hand in hand with strategies that improve health and education reduce inequality and spur economic growth all while tackling climate change and working to preserve our oceans and forests unquote mike drop now part of what my team does is constantly ask what are the ways that space technology can be used both to monitor the progress and to actually manage make progress towards the sdgs danielle wood's space enable team has identified different space technologies that can support the sustainable development goals and a few in particular directly address these goals with the help from satellites for example communication satellites can help with disaster recovery satellite positioning is helping track endangered wildlife and earth observation satellites can help us tackle hunger by allowing us to understand what areas on the planet are in danger of drought the space enable team is even working to help respond to the kovid 19 pandemic in different parts of the world [Music] let's be real space technology has shifted the way we see our planet and ourselves what do you think is going to be the future for space technology what do you want to see happen well there's a lot of things happening now that are really exciting that again is jeff masic so the commercial world has kind of pioneered a model in which there are constellations of small satellites landsat 8 and landsat 9 are pretty big systems and they get all of their imagery from one large platform when you look at some of the commercial companies out there they don't necessarily have the capabilities of landsat in terms of the spectral bands they acquire and the quality of the data but they acquire a lot of data and they do it by launching fleets of small satellites in some cases hundreds of cubesats cubesats are very small cube-shaped satellites as the name suggests they come in different sizes based on a standard unit that's about four inches long standardization helps make them cheaper to produce the idea was to help make space access affordable for the university science community and now not only universities but high schools middle schools even elementary schools have been able to start their own cubesat program they've been used for all sorts of things including remote sensing and communications that's a model that nasa is looking at i don't think we can put landsat on a cubesat just for technical reasons but we are looking in the future at constellation approaches where we sort of break up the mission into a series of smaller satellites because it's also more resilient right i mean we could have a single point of failure you know knock on wood we don't have one but if we had a single point of failure with landsat 9 we'd be kind of out of luck for several years if you launch a constellation of satellites and you have a single point failure you can live with it these expensive satellites that people often think of a lot of the actual cost is going into the testing and the review of the engineering over and over before it's launched here again is dr danielle wood because if you have a big expensive satellite that cost hundreds of millions of dollars you want to make sure that it's going to work and work well for many years if you're building a satellite that's more like the size of a toaster and it should last for less than a year and you might offer to have more of them after you finish this one then you can spend less time on the engineering on the testing the design but you still want to make sure you're using parts that make sense and and trying to get design as good as possible but you also might have more opportunities over this 10-year period to keep trying new technologies rather than sort of waiting 10 more years to try the next generation and technology keeps on advancing landsat satellites today can capture objects as small as 100 feet on the ground but future missions could provide even higher resolution um we don't have the resolution to look at area 51 very well um cool uh there was a researcher at goddard who was using satellite data including landsat to look at penguin populations in antarctica satellite images taken over the antarctic show large stained patches of sea ice identified as the bird's guano leading to the discovery of new breeding sites and as the bbc's victoria gill reports there are now thousands more penguins than first quarter that's awesome yeah i mean you know and that's that is one cool thing about landsat is people are always finding new applications right so it's it's not just like one thing you do again and again it's there's always new stuff to find i love that report penguin poop identified exactly can't see the penguins but you can see their poop wait someone had to make it right [Music] you can download the landsat data for free from the u.s geological survey website comb through it maybe you might discover something if you do share it with jeff nova now is a production of gbh and prx it's produced by ian koss re daniel jocelyn gonzalez isabel hibbard sandra lopez mosalve and christina monad julia court and chris schmidt are the co-executive producers of nova dante graves as director of audience development tsuki bennett is senior digital editor robin kasmer is science editor emma uk is research intern and nina porzuki is managing producer of podcasts at gbh our theme music is by the milky way's best turntablist dj kid koala i'm eloque patel we'll be back in two weeks which is plenty of time for you to look up satellite names and pick out your favorite maybe you can name your dog or your child the satellite name my favorite one is fun cube one but shout out to aolus aerocube 8b black sky pathfinder xiaoniang sky brazil one taikon theos ursa major wild blue one za cube 2 canopus b hodo yoshi and iridium are these satellites or superheroes and while we're all looking up in the sky and looking at stars and the thousands of satellites and maybe the space debris i hope you're all staying safe and you have a very very happy holiday season