WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.050 [music] 2 00:00:04.070 --> 00:00:08.070 [music] 3 00:00:08.090 --> 00:00:12.120 Narrator: Operation IceBridge if fundamentally about climate research, 4 00:00:12.140 --> 00:00:16.180 but it never misses an opporunity to teach. While deployed at the 5 00:00:16.200 --> 00:00:20.260 always-windy southernmost tip of Chile, the team hosted 6 00:00:20.280 --> 00:00:24.300 the US Ambassador, as well as the space agency's chief scientist. 7 00:00:24.320 --> 00:00:28.370 Ambassador: This is very exciting to be part of this NASA IceBridge mission 8 00:00:28.390 --> 00:00:32.400 and it shows what good work we do with the State Department and with NASA in promoting science diplomacy. 9 00:00:32.420 --> 00:00:36.430 in countries like Chile. Narrator: The pair traveled with the research team 10 00:00:36.450 --> 00:00:40.500 for an actual mission over Antarctica. There they got a first-hand opportunity 11 00:00:40.520 --> 00:00:44.530 to see how the team does the job. Stofan: IceBridge is vital because 12 00:00:44.550 --> 00:00:48.620 it's studying our changing Arctic and our changing Antarctic to help understand 13 00:00:48.640 --> 00:00:52.650 the real true effects of climate change that are happening in these regions. 14 00:00:52.670 --> 00:00:56.690 Narrator: Climate change presents intellectual challenges. It's tough 15 00:00:56.710 --> 00:01:00.770 to grasp transformations at the planetary scale when we live our lives 16 00:01:00.790 --> 00:01:04.780 at the human scale. But global climate is changing. 17 00:01:04.800 --> 00:01:08.810 And because it concerns the whole planet, NASA sends teams around the world 18 00:01:08.830 --> 00:01:12.820 to collect essential data. Operation IceBridge is just such a mission. 19 00:01:12.840 --> 00:01:16.840 It deploys flying research laboratories like this 20 00:01:16.860 --> 00:01:20.860 to repeatedly measure changes in polar ice. 21 00:01:20.880 --> 00:01:24.910 That's what brought the team to Punta Arenas at the southern tip of Chile. It's the best location 22 00:01:24.930 --> 00:01:28.940 for staging regular missions over Antarctica. 23 00:01:28.960 --> 00:01:32.970 It also afforded the US diplomatic mission first-hand experience with something that's 24 00:01:32.990 --> 00:01:37.020 ultimately beneficial for broader goals. 25 00:01:37.040 --> 00:01:41.070 So the studies that we're doing on climate change are critical to our mission. 26 00:01:41.090 --> 00:01:45.090 Ambassador: Our embassy's very supportive of this. It's part of my job, and part of our jobs as ambassadors 27 00:01:45.110 --> 00:01:49.130 to promote good relations between countries, and this kind of activity, this kind of mission 28 00:01:49.150 --> 00:01:49.160 does exactly that. 29 00:01:49.180 --> 00:01:53.180 30 00:01:53.200 --> 00:01:57.250 31 00:01:57.270 --> 00:02:01.290 32 00:02:01.310 --> 00:02:05.360 33 00:02:05.380 --> 00:02:09.390 34 00:02:09.410 --> 00:02:13.440 Somewhere in the air above Antarctica, I'm Michael Starobin. 35 00:02:13.460 --> 00:02:25.292 [beep beep, beep beep]