WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.170 In the summer of 1969 NASA made 2 00:00:04.190 --> 00:00:08.350 history. Well, yes, up here, of course, 3 00:00:08.370 --> 00:00:12.520 but way, way down here too. 4 00:00:12.540 --> 00:00:16.599 5 00:00:16.620 --> 00:00:20.770 Down 2,000 feet under the surface of the ocean. Starting off the coast of 6 00:00:20.790 --> 00:00:24.930 Florida, six aquanauts drift along inside the Gulf Stream 7 00:00:24.950 --> 00:00:29.090 for thirty days. 8 00:00:29.110 --> 00:00:33.220 9 00:00:33.240 --> 00:00:37.360 This is the Ben Franklin, a fifty-foot submersible 10 00:00:37.380 --> 00:00:41.490 designed by Swiss explorer Jacques Piccard and his team of engineers. 11 00:00:41.510 --> 00:00:45.580 The mission of the Ben Franklin is to explore the Gulf 12 00:00:45.600 --> 00:00:49.640 Stream, not by powering its way through it like a military submarine might 13 00:00:49.660 --> 00:00:53.669 do, but to enter it and become a part of it. 14 00:00:53.690 --> 00:00:57.690 The Ben Franklin will drift passively within the core of this massive current, 15 00:00:57.710 --> 00:01:01.870 observing and gathering scientific data along the way. 16 00:01:01.890 --> 00:01:06.050 17 00:01:06.070 --> 00:01:10.210 The crew will collect continuous observations on 18 00:01:10.230 --> 00:01:14.390 drift speed, water depth, water temperature, salinity, 19 00:01:14.410 --> 00:01:18.560 marine life in the stream and conduct 3D photomapping of 20 00:01:18.580 --> 00:01:22.730 the Continental Shelf. As the 21 00:01:22.750 --> 00:01:26.900 days extend into weeks, the crew of the Ben Franklin makes exciting 22 00:01:26.920 --> 00:01:31.040 scientific discoveries and observes amazing sea life 23 00:01:31.060 --> 00:01:35.180 24 00:01:35.200 --> 00:01:39.310 while at the same time having to endure sudden surges in the current, 25 00:01:39.330 --> 00:01:43.410 abrupt changes in the sea floor, and malfunctioning support 26 00:01:43.430 --> 00:01:47.490 systems that begin to make life inside the sub very 27 00:01:47.510 --> 00:01:51.550 uncomfortable. On August 14, 1969, 28 00:01:51.570 --> 00:01:55.600 after 1,400 miles and 31 days spent drifting within the Gulf 29 00:01:55.620 --> 00:01:59.620 Stream, the Ben Franklin splashes up some 300 miles 30 00:01:59.640 --> 00:02:03.790 off Nova Scotia, Canada. 31 00:02:03.810 --> 00:02:07.960 32 00:02:07.980 --> 00:02:12.130 The Ben Franklin and the Apollo 11 missions were perhaps the greatest 33 00:02:12.150 --> 00:02:16.310 expeditions of their kind and ended a decade of incredible technological 34 00:02:16.330 --> 00:02:20.490 achievements. The findings from the Ben Franklin mission 35 00:02:20.510 --> 00:02:24.670 provided a wealth of information that is still being used to this day and helps 36 00:02:24.690 --> 00:02:28.829 provide a better understanding of the Gulf Stream and its role in weather and climate. 37 00:02:28.850 --> 00:02:32.989 This influence becomes abundantly clear each year 38 00:02:33.010 --> 00:02:37.130 as hurricanes tear through the Atlantic coastal region. The warm water 39 00:02:37.150 --> 00:02:41.270 of the Gulf Stream often increases the intensity of hurricanes. 40 00:02:41.290 --> 00:02:45.400 That's when the impact of ocean currents can very literally hit home. 41 00:02:45.420 --> 00:02:49.600 NASA studies the ocean from a very different perspective, using 42 00:02:49.620 --> 00:02:53.660 satellites in space that can make measurements of many key ocean factors, 43 00:02:53.680 --> 00:02:57.720 such as ocean color, temperature, salinity, and many more that 44 00:02:57.740 --> 00:03:01.750 influence the ocean, such as winds and sea ice. Ocean currents 45 00:03:01.770 --> 00:03:05.940 are also closely linked with our atmosphere. The exchange of heat 46 00:03:05.960 --> 00:03:10.110 between the ocean and the atmosphere drives the atmospheric circulation 47 00:03:10.130 --> 00:03:14.280 over the entire globe. Ocean currents on the surface and the deep ocean circulation 48 00:03:14.300 --> 00:03:18.470 also redistribute heat absorbed by the ocean and allows the ocean 49 00:03:18.490 --> 00:03:22.650 to act as our planet's thermostat, helping regulate the temperature of Earth. 50 00:03:22.670 --> 00:03:26.820 The ocean and atmosphere are just two components of complex 51 00:03:26.840 --> 00:03:31.000 global system of give-and-take that impacts Earth's overall climate. 52 00:03:31.020 --> 00:03:35.160 From the work done over 40 years ago by the Ben Franklin mission, 53 00:03:35.180 --> 00:03:39.330 to the work done today by its satellites, NASA's study of Earth's 54 00:03:39.350 --> 00:03:43.540 systems is contributing to a better understanding of global climate change, 55 00:03:43.560 --> 00:03:47.680 its causes, effects, and consequences. 56 00:03:47.700 --> 00:03:51.730 57 00:03:51.750 --> 00:03:55.840 58 00:03:55.860 --> 00:03:59.920 59 00:03:59.940 --> 00:04:00.820