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I managed to get into the cockpit, which, for a mechanical engineer, is a dream come true. Of the the view is amazing, but something a wrong. This gigantic, ancient ice sheet is melting. We explore what is happening in greenland and how soon it will effect us. Marita davison socializes in evolution, Cara Santa Maria is a scientist journalist and educato in microbiology, and im phil torres, im an ento meteorologists. Thats the team, lets entomologist. Thats the team now lets do some science. 7 music ] hey, whim to techknow. Im phil torres, joined by shini somara, marita davison, and Cara Santa Maria. We are in for a treat. Shini you just got back from on amazing journey to one of the most spectacular places in the world. Please tell us about it. Well, it was an absolute dream come true mission that i was on. I went to greenland and i was mapping glaziers with n. A. S. A. On a peacefree aircraft. The views were stunning. Lets take a look. I travelled half a world away to get to a case some call the canary in the coal mine when it comes to climate change. Greenland. I was here to observe an n. A. S. A. Mission called operation icebridge. Since 2009 n. A. S. A. Has been flying Airborne Missions out of kangaloosa, a former u. S. Airbase. The goal is to measure changes to the Arctic Sea Ice and the ice sheet over greenland. We are just on our way to the air base and i am feeling kind of a bit nervous. Im not the most relaxed of flyers. So lets see what happens. It was 6am, and about 10 degrees farenheit. So its usually about a quarter of a mile walk to the plain. Whatever condition it might be in. You get to the plane, heat up the equipment, grab a hairdryer, and it is used to heat up the equipment and most of the equipment that we are using is off the shelf computer stuff designed to go if a climate controlled room with humidity control, and none of that is here. Here is a p3, a plane designed by the u. S. Navy as an antisubmarine aircraft. Its the perfect airplane for this mission. Its meant to travel long distances over big oceans over big altitudes. Bounces around in the turbulance. Just like we knew. N. A. S. A. Modified it with an array of sign tifg instruments and cameras. This is the forward bay. This is where the torpedoes would sit. Theres true. Normally there would be doors that open and close. We have taken the doors away and added a special fering to carry three of these. This is the airborne atm. Working with lasers in airplanes they are the two greatest things. I cant afford to buy a laser and an airplane on my own, so i get to work with n. A. S. A. They measure the surface area of the ice sending out laser. We mention the time of flight. The time it reaches it ground and comes back. We do that with knowledge. Aircrafts position in space when you put it together you have a detailed and accurate map of the topography in the flight path of the aircraft. By flying over many of the same flight paths, changes to the topography are documented. Each has an accuracy of about 10 centimetres. Are errors significant in comparison to the way the ice sheet is changing. For the most part, the sponsor of greenland, changes are in the order of 110 metre per year. They are huge changes. Scientists use the data to predict where the glaziers will be five years from now. How much more ice will we lose in five years. In recent years scientists have been concerned about acceleration and thinning of the glaziers, known as outlet glaziers. Im going to post the mission plan, the map that shows where we are going. Minutes before takeoff, Senior Scientist announces where exactly the plane is headed. We have been doing this mission for five years now. This is the southeast glacier. They have been interesting in recent years. It was dramatic in the early 2000s. And they started thinning at the same time. That was a surprise. Thats the reason we are here to monitor that continued progress, and why its happening. Its sort of infamous in circles. A lot of people Philadelphia Flyers this in turbulence. We have learnt to avoid that. That is what we are doing. In despite of his assurances, i was nervous. Every job has occupational hazards. Minutes after take off, the team takes measurements. So we are flying very low. We are typically flying 1500 feet. Its tight to where the instruments collect data. For scientist, every bit of data counts. You have to map all the area, even the areas that we think are not changing. Getting a map of the ice sheet is important, and we almost do it one glacier at a time, thats the benefit of mission. I cant get over how beautiful that place was. Glaziers . It was so unbelievable to fly at the low altitude. The aircraft is designed to fly close to the ocean. It was built to survey submarines , so it was designed for the job. But the views from the cockpit were stunning. I was pinching myself the whole time. We were looking outside the window at polar bear tracks. It was amazing. I understand the pilots can see a difference outside. What about the Science Behind that. Theres a lot of equipment on the aircraft. They measure the bedrock under the ice sheet. They found something that rivals the grand canyon. We learn about that in part two. I magged managed to get into the cockpit which, for a mechanical engineer, is a dream come true glaziers. Hidden in the mountains of afghanistan. What you have seen was a drop of the iceberg. A 5000 year old archeological site. This has preservation on a scale that no other sites have. Global mining and scheduled for demolition. Mes aynak is one of the most important sites in the century. With time running out. Theyre losing everything. Can archeologists stop the clock . This is rescue archaeologic we are trying to excavate as fast as possible. Its crazy money that you can make here. Behind americas oil boom. Its a ticking time bomb. Uncovering shocking working conditions. Do you know what chemicals have been in that tank . And the deadly human cost. My big brother didnt wake up the next day. Faultlines. Al jazeera americas hardhitting. Today they will be arrested. Groundbreaking. Theyre firing canisters of gas at us. Emmy awardwinning investigative series. Faultlines death on the bakken shale. Only on al jazeera america. Twitter. [ music hey, guys, welcome back to techknow. We are in the middle of shinis incredible journey over greenland. Spectacular views so far, and now the sign. One of the main object tefs of the mission is to understand the behaviour of the ice that sits over greenland. There was an array of technology recording that data. We get close to it, taking a firsthappened look. Lets check it firsthand look. Lets check it out. N. A. S. A. s operation icebridge is an airborne issue mapping changes to the arctic and antarctic. Greenland. Here we have to make our own dinners, and after a few hours of flying you work up an appetite. Not bad. There are few feature comforts in this p3 plane, but its business as usual for the scientists that spend eight to nine hours a day, six days a week, in the air. Operation icebridge began in 2009, after the satellite ice sat stopped functioning. With the next satellite ice sat ii not due until 2015, the Airborne Missions fill the gap and they take measurements that are impossible from space. We fly four different radar systems, allowing us to map the ice sheet from centimetre resolution at the surface, down to the bottom of the ice sheet. That doesnt happen on the satellite. If we could do this from satellite it would be helpful. We cant fly the radar from 600km off the surface. The moment powerful of the raiddars isthe m cords. It basically is designed to penetrate through multiple kilometres of ice, and be able to image the bedrock of underneath an ice sheet. You can say that mt kilomajaro was 500m tall. We are able to with that distance to depth sound ice sheets at 5,000 metres, basically. So its amazing. Why is it important to know what greenland looks like under the ice sheets. The object for the glaziologists is to go to modelling, based upon what is underneath, how quickly is the center of greenland moving towards the outer glaziers of greenland. Happening. Altitude. Glaziers. Okay. Thank you for coming, back to the seat. Collecting airborne data over flying. The aircraft is over the previous spot. Otherwise we cant compare the measurements. We had to invent a technique to place the aircraft where it needs to be. We have Computers Computing the position using gps. The computers are mounted, you probably saw it. It looks like a video game. The pilot steers to keep the icon over the path where we want it to be. So i managed to get into the cockpit, which, for a mechanical engineer, is a dream come true, and we are heading towards the glaziers. The views that i see are absolutely beautiful, and thats enough in itself for me. The mission is about collecting data and understanding exactly how the environment in the harsh area of the world is changing. Gas emissions cause Earth Service temperatures to rise, and here they are rising twice as fast on average than anywhere else on the world. This is resulting in the melting of the ice sheets and glaziers. Is there an environmental urgency to the shrinking. N. A. S. A. s stated purpose in the shrinking of ice sheets is the application of coastal communities. A proportion of the World Population lives near the coastal areas. Modest rises over 100 years, 200 years have dramatic impacts on humankind. In addition to gathering data. The team spent a great deal of time on sea ice mash measurementscollected form a picture of what lays beneath the ice. It measures thickness, thickness of the ice layer and the snow cover. Theres snow later on. Its like a parker traps warm air, its an important process to understand. According to recently released data Arctic Sea Ice cover is in record lows. We compared our data to 30, 40yearold data and find huge differences there. That is consistent with what the climate Scientists Say that the whole climate of the arctic has been changing. Its not just changes to the ice that could affect climate change. This year operation icebridge added a pair of speck trom otters on board, to monitor changes to the reflectivity of the ice, known as albedo. If it is changing, more ice is melting, it absorbs more energy. Because the ice sheet acts as a mirror of sunlight. It does. When the sea ice disappears and melts, you go from a white surface. Issue . Its a positive Feedback Mechanism of science. If the earth warms, it causes warming up more and builds like a snowball. For the ice bridge team the first step is collecting the data to better understand climate change. The goal is to provide scientists with a unified package, radar measurements, camera measurements, laser surface, they agree and form a package of data used to here. Flying on an airplane, 1500 foot above the ice sheet in greenland and collecting Scientific Data its an unusual job, and part of this you find people that are very this. Great place to work. The view out the Office Window is fantastic. That flight was absolutely incredible. I was anxious in the beginning, because its a notoriously bumping route with all the glaziers, but it was smooth, beautiful, and what was astounding was the way the crew and the scientists worked together to collect the essential data that we need to understand how the environment is changing around greenland. Coming up next the life of the scientists on the road. It is special because it contains small gas parl concludes that will particles that bubble up. In this case we were lucky to find whiskey. You can hear the al jazeeras Investigative Unit has tonights exclusive report. Stories that have impact. That make a difference. That open your world. This. Is what we do. America tonight. Tuesday through friday 10 00 eastern. Only on al jazeera america. Welcome back to techknow. Im phil torres, joined by Cara Santa Maria, marita davison, and dr shini somara. Now, shini has been taking us on a journey through greenland. We have seen the flights and the science. What was it like to be there with the scientists . Well, i got to experience that first hand. We were staying in the statement location as where the n. A. S. A. Crew live. It was pretty amazing, to say the last. Really cold. Lets take a look. I came to greenland to join n. A. S. A. s operation icebridge. Their goal is to collect the Critical Data on how polar ice sheets are changing. Here the an arctic they days are long at this time of year. You have to stay up until nearly midnight to catch the famous northern lights. To the n. A. S. A. Scientists home kiss. Just taken off my boots. They are so heavy, its a relief to take them off. Im keeping them outside my room, because its a custom. I noticed that my room used to be a storage room, so welcome to my humble dwelling. I told you it was basis. These are flip flops, essential when you share a bathroom with men and women. This is a second bed. Im supposed to share with a roommate. Luckily i have the place to myself. And the most important thing my food supplies, which is mostly sugar, and dried food where you add water. Its a home away from home. Its important to keep yourself fed at night because sometimes during the plane rides you cant always eat sitting down because of turbulence, or your stomach doesnt want you to eat because of turbulence. Its either one of the two, so for me dinnertime is the time to stock up on calories and get myself ready for the next day. Okay. I think wetoday. I think the weather turned out to be what we had hoped. The Data Collection was good. It cant get any better than that. As a bonus we saw spectacular scenario. So why dont we see what we have planned for tomorrow. This is not necessarily a nine to five day. If theres a problem, well investigate it. If its a software or hardware. If its hardware well fix it. We have long days. Sometimes your mind wants to bail out, and wants to move on to something else, something normal. But then i always think to myself is that going be normal or is this actually normal. The folks we travel with here kind of become a family. We make a lot of meals together and look out for each other. Thats a big part of what makes that whole thing bearable and rewarding. Little drier still. What do you think . It looks like it is a little bit pulley. Maybe a little more. Yours. You have pork sausage. Ready for a drink . What are we drinking. In is a little bit of glacier ice. We rode out to the local glacier land and act brick home a 20 pound block. The ice is special because it contains small gas particles that bubble up when you add liquid. In this case we are lucky to find whiskey and pore it in there and you hear the bubbles. The glacier is speaking to us. The glassier can be speaking to us in other ways. I went to see for myself what it looks like up close. 80 of this country is covered in an ice sheet. In some areas it reaches 2 miles deep. This gigantic ice sheet is shrinking. Put simply, its losing more ice each summer than it gains each winter. Since 2003 greenland has experienced a loss of 200 billion tonnes of ice a year. As it melts. It has the participation to speed up further climate change. Greenland being a primary ice mass acts as a buffer, absorbing merge in a large client. As it gets smaller, the impact to climate in africa or Papua New Guinea or the United States is amplified. Warming. Its global, yes. The early indicators probably will happen up here. You know, you seem warm and cosy when you were indoors, but hard. Gruelling . The schedule was really gruelling, starting at 5 30, or earlier, because it was coed bathrooms, so i, in particular, wanted to get in first at 4 30, but they were up really early, and everyone was showered and on the plane by at least six. But i loved seeing how at the end of the day they come together. Theres a lot of comraderie and warmth and joy around it. Phil, you and i spent a lot of time in field stations in the tropics, and a lot of that happens at the field stations. Fun to see it happening in the arctic. It was a little toasty where we were. Similar comraderie, four shore. There are a lot of knowns. The extent to which the glaziers are melting is surprising. But did you guys discover anything new on your journey . To draw conclusions about the environmental situation in statement. But i was talking to the pilots, and they were saying that they actually see year after year visual differences in the ice sheet in greenland because its changing so rapidly. That is quite scary, if you think about it. Thank you shini for sharing your incredible interesting, beautiful adventure. I know the n. A. S. A. Guys go to antarctica if the summer. Absolutely, different planes, different technology, but the same mission. Hopefully techknow can join them on that too. Hopefully. Join us next time. Dive into these stories and go behind the scenes at aljazeera. Com techknow. Follow our contributors on [crowd chanting] hell no gmo. Theyre slamming a technology that could be used to solve problems for people who desperately need it. They get exited about technology whether its in their phone or in their car, so why is it so weird on their plate . Somethings going into food that shouldnt really be there. Techknow investigates. You could not pay me to fake data. Greece submits a new plan to creditors in a lastditch bid to secure a bailout but it looks very much like the old one. Hello, this is al jazeera, live from doha im adrian and also on the program optimism and also disagreement, another deadline is missed in vienna and talks of Irans Nuclear program and burying body and stopping the spread, the battle against ebola is far from over in west africa. And we meet the people in china who are so worried about the safety of their food they are

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