SUMMARY
2 min 4 sec
Greenland is covered in so much ice that if it all melted, it would raise sea level around the world by 23 feet. While it's not all melting, scientists say that climate change is turning a lot of that ice to water. But, how do we know?
Two GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) satellites that orbit the Earth in tandem were launched in March 2002 by NASA. The pair measure the distance separating each other to an accuracy of 1 percent of the width of a human hair — and they orbit as far apart as Washington, DC and Philadelphia. Because each satellite accelerates or decelerates depending on the mass of the area beneath it (for example, a massive mountain range vs. flat lowlands), and because one satellite trails the other at some distance, the record of the shifting distance between them can be read like a giant planetary scale. And since they orbit over the same areas every ten days, the GRACE satellites provide a detailed record of mass changes in time, even tracking the seasonal accumulation and melting of Arctic snow.
ACTIVITY DESCRIPTION AND TEACHING MATERIALS
Watch >> How Do We Know - Greenland's Melting Ice Sheet
TEACHING NOTES / CONTEXT FOR USE
This short video is not only about Greenland's melting ice, but even moreso about how the GRACE satellites track water levels via gravity. This could be used in a setting teaching meteorology or ocean levels.
ASSESSMENT
Assessment is at the discretion of the educator as to how the video is applied and the expectations after viewing it.
REFERENCES AND RESOURCES
Byron Tapley - Dr. Byron Tapley is the Director of the Center for Space Research and Professor of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Texas. Dr. Tapley's research interests focus on the application on nonlinear parameter estimation methods to determine crustal motion, Earth rotation, the Earth's geopotential, and ocean and atmosphere circulations; as well as the interactions between the aforementioned systems.

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SUMMARY
2 min 4 sec
Greenland is covered in so much ice that if it all melted, it would raise sea level around the world by 23 feet. While it's not all melting, scientists say that climate change is turning a lot of that ice to water. But, how do we know?
Two GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) satellites that orbit the Earth in tandem were launched in March 2002 by NASA. The pair measure the distance separating each other to an accuracy of 1 percent of the width of a human hair — and they orbit as far apart as Washington, DC and Philadelphia. Because each satellite accelerates or decelerates depending on the mass of the area beneath it (for example, a massive mountain range vs. flat lowlands), and because one satellite trails the other at some distance, the record of the shifting distance between them can be read like a giant planetary scale. And since they orbit over the same areas every ten days, the GRACE satellites provide a detailed record of mass changes in time, even tracking the seasonal accumulation and melting of Arctic snow.
ACTIVITY DESCRIPTION AND TEACHING MATERIALS
Watch >> How Do We Know - Greenland's Melting Ice Sheet
TEACHING NOTES / CONTEXT FOR USE
This short video is not only about Greenland's melting ice, but even moreso about how the GRACE satellites track water levels via gravity. This could be used in a setting teaching meteorology or ocean levels.
ASSESSMENT
Assessment is at the discretion of the educator as to how the video is applied and the expectations after viewing it.
REFERENCES AND RESOURCES
Byron Tapley - Dr. Byron Tapley is the Director of the Center for Space Research and Professor of Aerospace Engineering at the University of Texas. Dr. Tapley's research interests focus on the application on nonlinear parameter estimation methods to determine crustal motion, Earth rotation, the Earth's geopotential, and ocean and atmosphere circulations; as well as the interactions between the aforementioned systems.

Are you absolutely sure you want to delete this resource? This process cannot be undone and is permanent.
Yes, Delete This Resource
Are you absolutely sure you want to remove this resource? This process cannot be undone and is permanent.
Yes, Remove This Resource
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