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Jamal Smith



Movie   ID   Roles   Title
How will climate change impact agriculture? This episode explores the need for accurate, continuous and accessible data and computer models to track and predict the challenges farmers face as they adjust to a changing climate.<p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10516 Videographer
  Science for a Hungry World: Agriculture and Climate Change
One of the biggest changes to global agriculture is less about the food itself as it is about the water we use to grow it. In some areas, farmers are using freshwater resources - including groundwater - at an alarming rate. The GRACE satellites enable scientists to discover changes to underground aquifers by monitoring changes in the Earth's gravity. In northern India, farmers rely heavily on irrigation to grow crops, and the resulting massive aquifer depletion creates an uncertain future for the region. <p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10512 Videographer
  Science for a Hungry World: Growing Water Problems
In its first year of operations, NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has mapped the entire sky with unprecedented resolution and sensitivity in gamma-rays, the highest-energy form of light. On May 10, 2009 a pair of gamma-ray photons reached Fermi only 900 milliseconds apart after traveling for 7 billion years. Fermi’s measurement gives us rare experimental evidence that space-time is smooth as Einstein predicted, and has shut the door on several approaches to gravity where space-time is foamy enough to interfere strongly with light.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10510 Videographer
  Einstein's Cosmic Speed Limit
Short video on the highlights and themes of the Women in Astronomy Conference for 2009.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10506 Videographer
  Women in Astronomy 2009
We know climate change can affect us, but does climate change alter something as vast, deep and mysterious as our oceans? For years, scientists have studied the world's oceans by sending out ships and divers, deploying data-gathering buoys, and by taking aerial measurements from planes. But one of the better ways to understand oceans is to gain an even broader perspective - the view from space. NASA's Earth observing satellites do more than just take pictures of our planet. High-tech sensors gather data, including ocean surface temperature, surface winds, sea level, circulation, and even marine life. Information the satellites obtain help us understand the complex interactions driving the world's oceans today - and gain valuable insight into how the impacts of climate change on oceans might affect us on dry land.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10502 Videographer
  Climate Change and the Global Ocean
Sponsored by USAID, the Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWS NET) was designed to help governments and aid agencies assess the need for food aid before a famine develops. This episode describes FEWS NET and looks at how FEWS NET uses NASA data to make decisions on the ground.<p><p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10500 Videographer
  Science for a Hungry World: Food Security
Water is all around us, and its importance to nearly every natural process on earth cannot be underestimated. The water cycle is the movement of water around the Earth in all its forms, from the ocean to the atmosphere, to snow, soil, aquifers, lakes, and streams on land, and ultimately backs to the ocean. This video explains what the water cycle is and how important it is to life on earth.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10509 Videographer
  Water, Water Everywhere!
Every day, NASA collects information vital to food production all over the world. This information is a valuable asset.  NASA's mission: to give it away for free. With the data they collect, teams of NASA researchers and their partners at the USDA Foreign Agriculture Service, USAID Famine Early Warning Network (FEWS NET), NOAA, and several major universities including the University of Maryland, work to increase crop yields, ease famine, and keep the global agricultural system functioning.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10491 Videographer
  Science For a Hungry World: NASA's Partners
As the first of six episodes, Science for a Hungry World: Part 1 sets the groundwork for explaining why NASA data is critical to ensure a stable global food system. This video reveals how satellite remote sensing data provide the world with essential information like the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, or NDVI, which allows scientists and governments to see the health of crops on a global scale. This video reinforces the idea that a unique perspective from space is essential for continuous global agricultural monitoring and accurate forecasting.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10490 Videographer
  Science For a Hungry World: Introduction
This short video explains the purposes and capabilities of Spacebook.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10487 Videographer
  NASA's Spacebook
<b>GSFC Control Rooms</b><p>Though the actual Atlas rocket carrying NASA's LRO mission was launched from a site at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Mission Operations Control Center (or MOCC) is located at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.  It is from the MOCC and Flight Conrol room (also at Goddard) that engineers will actually   10469 Videographer
  LRO Launch - More Views
NASA's Wayne Esaias sees honeybees as important data collectors to help us understand our changing climate. <p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10481 Videographer
  Feeling the Sting of Climate Change
Exactly a month ago on June 27 NASA launched a new and improved weather satellite called GOES-O. Now that GOES-O is safely into its orbit, it has been renamed to GOES-14. On July 27, 2009 NOAA and NASA released the first full disk image from GOES-14 showing that the satellite is operating correctly. NASA Goddard Producer Silvia Stoyanova, visits the NOAA Satellite Operations Facility in Suitland, Md. for the release of the first image and talks to NOAA Meteorologist Tom Renkevens about it.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10472 Videographer
  NASA/NOAA GOES-14: First Full Disk Image
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Neil Armstrong making his way to the lunar surface, by climbing down the lunar module ladder.<p>   10453 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Neil Armstrong Making His Way to the Lunar Surface
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Buzz Aldrin follows Neil Armstrong down the lunar module ladder. <p>   10454 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Buzz Aldrin Following Neil Armstrong Down the Lunar Module Ladder
A side by sidy comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong unveil the commemorative plaque.<p>   10455 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong Unveil the Commemorative Plaque
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Neil Armstrong's television panorama.<p>   10456 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Neil Armstrong's Television Panorama
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Neil Armstrong photographing Buzz Aldrin setting up a Solar Wind Collector.<p>   10457 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Neil Armstrong Photographs Buzz Aldrin Setting Up a Solar Wind Collector
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Raising the American Flag.<p>   10458 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Raising the American Flag
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Buzz Aldrin walking and running.<p>   10459 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Buzz Aldrin Walking and Running
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of the astronauts talking with President Nixon.<p>   10460 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of the Astronauts Talking with President Nixon
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Buzz Aldrin kicking moon dust.<p>   10461 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Buzz Aldrin Kicking Moon Dust
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Buzz Aldrin carrying experiment packages.<p>   10462 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Buzz Aldrin Carrying Experiment Packages
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Buzz Aldrin hammering a core sample tube into the moon's surface.<p>   10463 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Buzz Aldrin Hammering a Core Sample Tube into the Moon's Surface
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of  Buzz Aldrin entering the LM after an EVA.<p>   10464 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Buzz Aldrin Entering the LM after an EVA
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of astronauts storing rock samples into the LM.<p>   10465 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Astronauts Storing Rock Samples into the LM
A side by side comparison of the original broadcast video and partially restored video of Neil Armstrong climbing the ladder after the three hour EVA.<p>   10466 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Partially Restored Video of Neil Armstrong Climbing the Ladder After the Three Hour EVA
Never before seen video of astronauts jettisoning backpacks. The broadcasting companies of the day stopped recording, due to the fact that the astronauts were inside the LM getting ready for take off.  A NASA employee filmed this by aiming his 8mm camera at a monitor.  <p>This version is framed to be compared with the footage previously in the NASA archive, however there was no footage in the archive for this segment.  For the full frame version, see below.   10467 Videographer
  Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Never Before Seen Video of Astronauts Jettisoning Backpacks
Apollo 11 Highlights<p>   10451 Videographer
  NASA Releases Preview Partially Restored Apollo 11 Video
In this video, two days prior to the GOES-O launch, NASA Goddard Producer Silvia Stoyanova visits Cape Canaveral's Air Force Station, launch pad 37, to talk to GOES N-P Program Manager Charlie Maloney and Boeing Systems Engineer Pat Jasanis about the importance of the GOES-O mission as well as the launch vehicle, and some behind the scenes activities prior to launch.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10448 Videographer
  GOES-O: Days Before Launch
In this video, two days prior to the GOES-O launch, NASA Goddard Producer Silvia Stoyanova visits Cape Canaveral's Air Force Station, launch pad 37, to talk to United Launch Alliance (ULA) Delta IV Chief Engineer Russel Taub, about the launch vehicle on which NASA is sending GOES-O into space. Russel Taub explains the reasons behind choosing this particular rocket and also the way it gets tested to make sure that the spacecraft reaches its orbit. <p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10449 Videographer
  GOES-O: Behind The Scenes With a Rocket Scientist
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