1 00:00:06,272 --> 00:00:07,574 There are nine 2 00:00:07,574 --> 00:00:11,177 science requirements for ICESat-2 when the mission was stood up 3 00:00:11,177 --> 00:00:15,415 initially, and all of those were mostly for cryosphere science. 4 00:00:15,582 --> 00:00:19,486 One of those capabilities was that the green wavelength 5 00:00:19,486 --> 00:00:22,956 of ICESat-2’s laser altimeter does penetrate water. 6 00:00:22,956 --> 00:00:26,693 And no one really thought from 300 miles in space that it would provide 7 00:00:27,093 --> 00:00:31,865 a real value added to nearshore and coastal bathymetry, as an example. 8 00:00:32,465 --> 00:00:36,002 One of those products or efforts, I should say, 9 00:00:36,002 --> 00:00:39,372 is to develop a global bathymetry product. 10 00:00:39,806 --> 00:00:42,809 And so that was ATL24. 11 00:00:42,842 --> 00:00:45,712 So what this product does is it takes the, 12 00:00:45,712 --> 00:00:49,649 geolocated point cloud data, which is ATL03, 13 00:00:49,849 --> 00:00:55,422 and does a unique way of signal finding and then classifying that signal 14 00:00:55,555 --> 00:00:58,958 these photons, detected photons, as either sea surface 15 00:00:59,259 --> 00:01:02,262 or seafloor. 16 00:01:04,831 --> 00:01:08,535 And we do this globally in areas that we know 17 00:01:08,535 --> 00:01:12,872 ICESat-2 has a has a high probability of collecting bathymetric data. 18 00:01:13,873 --> 00:01:14,207 A lot of 19 00:01:14,207 --> 00:01:17,944 my work involves mapping of nearshore areas and particular 20 00:01:17,944 --> 00:01:22,615 mapping of bathymetry, which means water depths, and nearshore areas. 21 00:01:23,216 --> 00:01:25,285 And unfortunately, in areas all over the world, 22 00:01:25,285 --> 00:01:28,288 we have a global nearshore data void, which basically means 23 00:01:28,354 --> 00:01:33,460 we have these big gaps in coverage of water depths near the near the shoreline. 24 00:01:33,593 --> 00:01:35,161 And so fortunately, 25 00:01:35,161 --> 00:01:38,965 ICESat-2 has proven remarkable at measuring this nearshore bathymetry. 26 00:01:38,965 --> 00:01:42,602 In my work, geospatial data products often include 27 00:01:43,036 --> 00:01:46,005 bathymetric digital elevation models or DEMs. 28 00:01:46,005 --> 00:01:48,842 So these are models of seafloor elevation. 29 00:01:48,842 --> 00:01:52,679 And so although ICESat-2 wasn’t designed initially for a bathymetric 30 00:01:52,679 --> 00:01:56,683 measurement--it was primarily designed for measuring ice sheets, glaciers and sea 31 00:01:56,683 --> 00:02:02,088 ice--it really has proven to be great at measurement of nearshore bathymetry 32 00:02:02,088 --> 00:02:05,291 and these other, nearshore, you know, seafloor data products. 33 00:02:05,859 --> 00:02:10,396 So a lot of users of ICESat-2 bathymetry are hydrographic surveying offices. 34 00:02:10,897 --> 00:02:15,235 And so these are offices which are charged with surveying 35 00:02:15,235 --> 00:02:19,772 bathymetry and basically collecting data that goes on to nautical charts. 36 00:02:19,772 --> 00:02:23,776 And these nautical charts are what keep mariners safe at sea when they’re 37 00:02:23,776 --> 00:02:25,311 when they’re navigating at sea. 38 00:02:25,311 --> 00:02:25,745 And so 39 00:02:25,745 --> 00:02:29,349 some of the ways that hydrographic survey offices can use ATL24, 40 00:02:29,716 --> 00:02:33,319 for example, if you’re getting ready to send small boats into an area 41 00:02:33,319 --> 00:02:38,024 to do surveying in a place where you just don’t have great existing data. 42 00:02:38,191 --> 00:02:42,028 This can potentially be dangerous, particularly if you’re working in areas 43 00:02:42,028 --> 00:02:45,331 where there might be submerged hazards, rocks, for example. 44 00:02:46,065 --> 00:02:50,637 I really think it’s important to, to know that ATL24 is right now 45 00:02:51,171 --> 00:02:55,441 a product that gives you sea surface and seafloor elevations 46 00:02:55,775 --> 00:02:59,979 at the native resolution of 70 centimeters in the along track direction, 47 00:02:59,979 --> 00:03:04,417 but the way that we’re going to eventually offer it to the community through SlideRule 48 00:03:04,417 --> 00:03:08,655 makes it so that you can customize your bathymetry product. 49 00:03:09,022 --> 00:03:12,692 So SlideRule is a what I call a web-based data service. 50 00:03:12,859 --> 00:03:14,761 At the core of SlideRule, the idea that we have 51 00:03:14,761 --> 00:03:18,031 is that it is the idea that it would be more efficient and better 52 00:03:18,031 --> 00:03:22,402 for NASA, better for the science communities, if we distribute 53 00:03:22,468 --> 00:03:26,072 level-three and level-four science data products as a service 54 00:03:26,072 --> 00:03:29,876 instead of a statically pre-generated archival data set. 55 00:03:30,610 --> 00:03:33,780 And so scientists then don’t have to work with the hundreds 56 00:03:33,780 --> 00:03:36,783 of terabytes of photon cloud data. 57 00:03:36,983 --> 00:03:39,752 They can work with hundreds of gigabytes 58 00:03:39,752 --> 00:03:43,890 or gigabytes of the specific ice sheet elevation 59 00:03:43,890 --> 00:03:47,527 data that that they want for their investigation. 60 00:03:47,827 --> 00:03:50,997 And so that's where SlideRule comes in, where we instead 61 00:03:50,997 --> 00:03:54,234 of distributing pre-generated static files, 62 00:03:54,400 --> 00:03:56,769 we are distributing in a sense the algorithms. 63 00:03:56,769 --> 00:04:01,274 So they can ask hard questions about a lot of data over a lot of time, 64 00:04:01,741 --> 00:04:04,544 using algorithms that had a lot of time invested 65 00:04:04,544 --> 00:04:07,547 in them, sophisticated algorithms and tuning it for their application. 66 00:04:07,580 --> 00:04:12,051 I think ICESat-2 with the expected lifetime of being another 67 00:04:12,285 --> 00:04:16,155 maybe ten years based on the level of consumables on board. 68 00:04:16,789 --> 00:04:22,061 It's it's poised to just be a component of the Earth-observing system 69 00:04:22,061 --> 00:04:26,165 as a whole for a while, and can be a validation capability 70 00:04:26,165 --> 00:04:29,168 in and of itself to other or new missions that are launched.