WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:08.150 --> 00:00:08.380 2 00:00:08.400 --> 00:00:11.680 Light gives plants the energy they need to grow. 3 00:00:11.700 --> 00:00:13.280 4 00:00:13.300 --> 00:00:16.490 But what happens if plants receive too much light? 5 00:00:16.510 --> 00:00:17.310 6 00:00:17.330 --> 00:00:19.910 The answer is they glow. 7 00:00:19.930 --> 00:00:20.330 8 00:00:20.350 --> 00:00:25.090 This neon glow is actually happening around us all the time. 9 00:00:25.110 --> 00:00:25.400 10 00:00:25.420 --> 00:00:33.130 The result of a cellular process where light from the sun is transformed and released as fluorescent light. 11 00:00:33.150 --> 00:00:36.430 12 00:00:36.450 --> 00:00:39.980 A journey into the plant cell reveals how it works. 13 00:00:40.000 --> 00:00:41.980 14 00:00:42.000 --> 00:00:48.140 This is a chloroplast, the energy producing organ found inside the cells of plants. 15 00:00:48.160 --> 00:00:50.180 16 00:00:50.200 --> 00:00:57.610 When sunlight strikes a plant, disc-like structures within the chloroplast absorb the light and convert it into energy. 17 00:00:57.630 --> 00:00:58.330 18 00:00:58.350 --> 00:01:04.740 However, a small fraction of this light, about one percent, is emitted as fluorescent light. 19 00:01:04.760 --> 00:01:06.670 20 00:01:06.690 --> 00:01:10.830 The light exits the plant cell and is released into the atmosphere. 21 00:01:10.850 --> 00:01:11.130 22 00:01:11.150 --> 00:01:19.490 The amount of light released can vary depending on factors like the time of day, time of year, and how much sunlight is being absorbed. 23 00:01:19.510 --> 00:01:20.690 24 00:01:20.710 --> 00:01:25.080 Humans can't see this light. Our eyes just aren't that sensitive. 25 00:01:25.100 --> 00:01:32.950 To see the fluorescent light that's emitted from plants all over the world, we have to use scientific instruments that are placed on satellites. 26 00:01:32.970 --> 00:01:33.580 27 00:01:33.600 --> 00:01:40.090 Earth observation satellites outfitted with special sensors are able to detect this light from space. 28 00:01:40.110 --> 00:01:40.980 29 00:01:41.000 --> 00:01:46.500 After multiple orbits, scientists can construct a detailed view of the data. 30 00:01:46.520 --> 00:01:48.230 31 00:01:48.250 --> 00:01:51.660 This is what plant fluorescence looks like on a global scale. 32 00:01:51.680 --> 00:01:52.870 33 00:01:52.890 --> 00:02:02.750 The visualization was created from five years of satellite measurements analyzed by a team of researchers led by scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. 34 00:02:02.770 --> 00:02:04.380 35 00:02:04.400 --> 00:02:09.960 Each point of light on this globe represents fluorescent light exiting a plant cell. 36 00:02:09.980 --> 00:02:10.320 37 00:02:10.340 --> 00:02:14.280 The greater the intensity of light, the brighter the color. 38 00:02:14.300 --> 00:02:15.310 39 00:02:15.330 --> 00:02:25.990 By observing changes in intensity over time, scientists can distinguish stressed, dead or dormant plants from healthy and growing vegetation. 40 00:02:26.010 --> 00:02:27.280 41 00:02:27.300 --> 00:02:34.110 Fluorescent measurements like these are important because they can be used to develop improved vegetation models. 42 00:02:34.130 --> 00:02:34.680 43 00:02:34.700 --> 00:02:40.770 And this will lead to better predictions of how plants will interact with the Earth's environment in a changing climate. 44 00:02:40.790 --> 00:02:54.388