WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:02.310 --> 00:00:04.970 This seems like an unlikely place for fires. 2 00:00:04.970 --> 00:00:08.320 In the winter the landscape is still. 3 00:00:08.320 --> 00:00:12.130 But the warmer months can bring conditions that, combined with fire, 4 00:00:12.130 --> 00:00:15.780 can release dangerous amounts of carbon into the atmosphere 5 00:00:15.780 --> 00:00:18.140 And in more ways than one. 6 00:00:18.140 --> 00:00:22.930 What happens in the Arctic does not stay in the Arctic anymore. 7 00:00:22.930 --> 00:00:28.410 NASA Explorers 8 00:00:28.410 --> 00:00:30.010 Episode Three 9 00:00:30.010 --> 00:00:32.940 The Carbon Problem 10 00:00:32.940 --> 00:00:33.450 Fires 11 00:00:33.450 --> 00:00:36.870 I see that you’re wearing a hat with a logo on it. 12 00:00:36.870 --> 00:00:39.910 Can you describe what that is? 13 00:00:39.910 --> 00:00:41.800 You don't have to take your hat off! 14 00:00:41.800 --> 00:00:42.870 Well, that’s good. 15 00:00:42.870 --> 00:00:43.980 16 00:00:43.980 --> 00:00:48.110 Kevin, in the orange jacket, is a close NASA collaborator. 17 00:00:48.110 --> 00:00:53.160 He and his team are used to getting their hands dirty to collect crucial fire data. 18 00:00:53.160 --> 00:00:56.500 I’m wearing a hat right now, from the ABoVE field campaign 19 00:00:56.500 --> 00:00:58.350 And what you see is a big "A" 20 00:00:58.350 --> 00:01:03.760 And it stands for trees tilting over with thawing permafrost 21 00:01:03.760 --> 00:01:05.150 [laughing] 22 00:01:05.150 --> 00:01:08.600 Trees aren’t the only thing getting warped by thawing permafrost. 23 00:01:08.600 --> 00:01:10.890 Buildings and even roads begin to buckle 24 00:01:10.890 --> 00:01:14.180 when the ground beneath them literally begins to liquify. 25 00:01:14.180 --> 00:01:18.100 NASA’s ABoVE campaign is currently in the Northwest Territories 26 00:01:18.100 --> 00:01:21.850 to understand large scale changes to permafrost. 27 00:01:21.850 --> 00:01:26.160 Permafrost is basically, picture in your mind, frozen dirt 28 00:01:26.160 --> 00:01:29.100 Now if you thaw the permafrost out, it changes from 29 00:01:29.100 --> 00:01:32.390 solid rock or concrete, to mud. 30 00:01:32.390 --> 00:01:35.890 If you watched Season One of NASA Explorers, 31 00:01:35.890 --> 00:01:39.090 then you know that permafrost stores huge amounts of carbon. 32 00:01:39.090 --> 00:01:43.770 As a matter of fact, twice as much as what’s currently in the atmosphere today. 33 00:01:43.770 --> 00:01:46.740 Now, thankfully permafrost thaws really slowly 34 00:01:46.740 --> 00:01:49.490 and therefore releases carbon really slowly. 35 00:01:49.490 --> 00:01:51.880 But here’s where it gets complicated. 36 00:01:51.880 --> 00:01:55.080 Fires in high northern latitudes (permafrost regions) 37 00:01:55.080 --> 00:01:59.360 are getting larger, they're getting more frequent, getting more intense 38 00:01:59.360 --> 00:02:03.640 In the past, permafrost has had a reliable layer of insulation 39 00:02:03.640 --> 00:02:05.490 - mostly moss. 40 00:02:05.490 --> 00:02:06.690 But if you have a fire, 41 00:02:06.690 --> 00:02:10.720 it burns off the vegetation. The insulation is, essentially, removed. 42 00:02:10.720 --> 00:02:14.340 To summarize, changing climate means more fires, 43 00:02:14.340 --> 00:02:17.340 more thawing, more carbon in the atmosphere 44 00:02:17.340 --> 00:02:19.910 and that accelerates warming. 45 00:02:19.910 --> 00:02:24.020 Permafrost is one of those important factors that affects life on Earth, 46 00:02:24.020 --> 00:02:28.110 yet it isn’t really in the public eye - unless you live on it. 47 00:02:28.110 --> 00:02:31.140 But for Kevin, understanding this phenomenon is 48 00:02:31.140 --> 00:02:34.460 the best way to make the biggest difference. 49 00:02:34.460 --> 00:02:37.240 So way back in the 80s, when I was in college 50 00:02:37.240 --> 00:02:41.500 my mom got cancer. And was dying. 51 00:02:41.500 --> 00:02:43.810 And I remember the last time I saw her, 52 00:02:43.810 --> 00:02:48.180 We were sitting down, and she was in bed, very sick. 53 00:02:48.180 --> 00:02:50.990 And she asked me what did I want to do. 54 00:02:50.990 --> 00:02:54.210 And until then, of course, I was a typical teenager in college 55 00:02:54.210 --> 00:02:55.140 I had no clue. 56 00:02:55.140 --> 00:02:57.630 But then it crystalized in my mind that 57 00:02:57.630 --> 00:02:59.950 I wanted to save the planet. 58 00:02:59.950 --> 00:03:02.170 And that was the words that I used. 59 00:03:02.170 --> 00:03:07.560 I decided that my path for doing that was to go into spaceflight 60 00:03:07.560 --> 00:03:11.120 Save the planet by leaving it, I suppose. 61 00:03:11.120 --> 00:03:12.110 62 00:03:12.110 --> 00:03:14.490 But then, circumstances changed and 63 00:03:14.490 --> 00:03:17.700 I started working on Earth observations. 64 00:03:17.700 --> 00:03:22.870 and it opened my eyes to what you can do with remote sensing and satellites 65 00:03:22.870 --> 00:03:28.370 And what you could see and learn about the Earth from looking at it from space 66 00:03:28.370 --> 00:03:31.140 That's why I decided to go back to school 67 00:03:31.140 --> 00:03:36.640 And I rethought of what I talked to my mom about 68 00:03:36.640 --> 00:03:42.620 and I decided to go back to school and become a scientist. 69 00:03:42.620 --> 00:03:45.400 70 00:03:45.400 --> 00:03:47.970 The hours are long and the work is hard. 71 00:03:47.970 --> 00:03:51.230 But these explorers wouldn’t have it any other way. 72 00:03:51.230 --> 00:03:55.160 This is really, you know, tough country. It's really rugged. 73 00:03:55.160 --> 00:03:57.450 But it’s also very beautiful country. 74 00:03:57.450 --> 00:03:58.190 75 00:03:58.190 --> 00:04:02.010 I think I can speak for nearly every scientist that I've worked with. 76 00:04:02.010 --> 00:04:04.800 They do this because they want to help. 77 00:04:04.800 --> 00:04:10.480 They want to provide the information and tools to solve problems. 78 00:04:10.480 --> 00:04:17.760 79 00:04:17.760 --> 00:04:21.530 On the next episode of NASA Explorers 80 00:04:21.530 --> 00:04:24.150 NASA is a big and capable organization, 81 00:04:24.150 --> 00:04:27.570 but Earth science is a subject far too big 82 00:04:27.570 --> 00:04:32.220 for one country, one agency, to tackle all by itself. 83 00:04:32.220 --> 00:04:34.720 84 00:04:34.720 --> 00:04:38.110 Episode Four: Chasing Clouds 85 00:04:38.110 --> 00:04:42.453