1 00:00:00,010 --> 00:00:04,000 [whoosh, laser sound] 2 00:00:04,020 --> 00:00:08,070 [music] 3 00:00:08,090 --> 00:00:12,080 4 00:00:12,100 --> 00:00:16,130 [music] 5 00:00:16,150 --> 00:00:20,250 At 5am the Operation IceBridge team 6 00:00:20,270 --> 00:00:24,380 got the weather briefing they were hoping to hear: The Ross Sea 7 00:00:24,400 --> 00:00:28,450 had unusually clear skies, and so the first ever basin-wide 8 00:00:28,470 --> 00:00:32,480 laser and radar survey of this critical area was officially a go. 9 00:00:32,500 --> 00:00:36,490 "It should be good all day. Yeah, but like you said, this 10 00:00:36,510 --> 00:00:40,620 has been pretty ugly for quite a while so." "Yeah, it has. And that's a baseline mission." 11 00:00:40,640 --> 00:00:44,630 Three hours later, the NASA P-3 aircraft 12 00:00:44,650 --> 00:00:48,650 was on the move, taking off from the sea ice runway at 13 00:00:48,670 --> 00:00:52,730 McMurdo Station, and heading to its science target. 14 00:00:52,750 --> 00:00:56,760 The particular flight paths for the Ross Sea 15 00:00:56,780 --> 00:01:00,780 Fluxgate mission were chosen to sample the movement, or flux, 16 00:01:00,800 --> 00:01:04,830 of flows of sea ice moving northward from the coast. 17 00:01:04,850 --> 00:01:08,870 A few hours into the mission, the team encountered 18 00:01:08,890 --> 00:01:12,940 large icebergs that had broken off of nearby ice sheets, as well as many 19 00:01:12,960 --> 00:01:16,970 cracks of open ocean water, or leads, in the sea ice. 20 00:01:16,990 --> 00:01:21,010 These leads generated moisture in the air, causing localized 21 00:01:21,030 --> 00:01:25,100 fog and low cloud cover, but nothing the team’s instruments couldn’t handle. 22 00:01:25,120 --> 00:01:29,110 The leads also make a good science target because 23 00:01:29,130 --> 00:01:33,130 measuring the local sea surface height enables researchers to estimate the thickness 24 00:01:33,150 --> 00:01:37,160 of the sea ice above and below the water. 25 00:01:37,180 --> 00:01:41,200 The Ross Sea is particularly important to study since it’s one of the few places 26 00:01:41,220 --> 00:01:45,290 where sea ice coverage has been, on average, increasing 27 00:01:45,310 --> 00:01:49,330 over the last few decades. IceBridge thickness 28 00:01:49,350 --> 00:01:53,370 data should help illuminate whether that increased area actually represents 29 00:01:53,390 --> 00:01:57,430 a greater total volume of ice as well. 30 00:01:57,450 --> 00:02:05,706 [beep beep, beep beep]