Global Maps of Dryness Help Prepare for Water Use around the Globe
Narration: Katy Mersmann
Transcript:
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Gravity. It keeps Earth
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orbiting around the Sun, satellites in Earth’s orbit and all of us
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standing on the ground. Gravity also allows us to track how
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water moves around our home planet. By measuring minute
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changes in gravity from space, the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment,
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or GRACE mission, and its successor, GRACE Follow-on, have helped us
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follow water moving on and below Earth’s surface for more than 15 years.
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Now, integrating these and other measurements
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into advanced computer models allows researchers to distinguish water
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in the soil, root zone and deeper in the ground – and to forecast
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into the future. Working with the National Drought Mitigation Center,
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NASA scientists are providing global water availability maps
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and U.S. forecasts to the public. The forecasts look
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30, 60 and 90 days into the future and allow farmers,
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community managers and researchers to prepare for flash droughts and floods.
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The ability to forecast where water will be comes from knowing
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where water has been, measuring soil moisture and how much water has been gained
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or lost from aquifers. Using the models to separate the water
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into layers, we can better predict events like flash floods, which are more likely
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when the surface soil is already saturated, and anticipate droughts
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as aquifers run out of water and take time to recharge.
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Among the layers, surface soil moisture responds most rapidly to the weather,
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while root zone soil moisture – the water available to plants – changes more
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slowly, and groundwater – a vital resource for drinking water
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and agriculture – evolves over months and longer.
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Like here in the Okavango Delta. In the 25 years before
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GRACE launched, the region experienced a prolonged drought.
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Around the time GRACE started collecting data in 2002
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precipitation picked back up. While the soil moisture quickly responded, it took longer
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for the aquifers to refill.Although groundwater is not immediately
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immediately affected by drought, it also takes longer to recover from drought.
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In Australia, a historic drought in the early 2000s impacted
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all of the layers. Another drought at the end of 2019
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was seen by the GRACE-FO mission and dried out vegetation in the region,
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leading to intense fires that burned through early 2020.
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Let’s take another look at Europe. A heatwave scorched western Europe,
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melting glaciers and drying out the region. Soil moisture dries
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up almost immediately, while the root zone, which crops rely on, takes
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longer to catch up. This computer model, by assimilating
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satellite observations, helps monitor drought and wetness conditions.
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NASA scientists originally developed the capability for the United States,
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but it is now providing valuable information on the whole world.
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Combining NASA’s spaceborne view with research and high end computing
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helps us better prepare for extremes in water availability.
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EXPLORE
EARTH
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NASA