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   Arctic Space Exploration

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   Arctic Space Exploration

 * Space exploration


SPACE EXPLORATION

Space exploration is the ongoing discovery and exploration of celestial
structures in outer space by means of continuously evolving and growing space
technology. While the study of space is carried out mainly by astronomers with
telescopes, the physical exploration of space is conducted both by unmanned
robotic probes and human spaceflight.

While the observation of objects in space, known as astronomy, predates reliable
recorded history, it was the development of large and relatively efficient
rockets during the early 20th century that allowed physical space exploration to
become a reality. Common rationales for exploring space include advancing
scientific research, national prestige, uniting different nations, ensuring the
future survival of humanity, and developing military and strategic advantages
against other countries.

Space exploration has often been used as a proxy competition for geopolitical
rivalries such as the Cold War. The early era of space exploration was driven by
a "Space Race" between the Soviet Union and the United States. The launch of the
first human-made object to orbit Earth, the Soviet Union's Sputnik 1, on 4
October 1957, and the first Moon landing by the American Apollo 11 mission on 20
July 1969 are often taken as landmarks for this initial period. The Soviet space
program achieved many of the first milestones, including the first living being
in orbit in 1957, the first human spaceflight (Yuri Gagarin aboard Vostok 1) in
1961, the first spacewalk (by Aleksei Leonov) on 18 March 1965, the first
automatic landing on another celestial body in 1966, and the launch of the first
space station (Salyut 1) in 1971.

Read more
This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia -
https://wn.com/Space_exploration


PODCASTS:



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 * SCIENCE UNCUT: "ARCTIC ON THE EDGE?"
   
   NASA's Tom Wagner hosts an informal discussion with ice scientists about the
   major changes seen in the Arctic during 2012 -- shrinking sea ice, melting of
   the Greenland ice sheet, and more. The program highlights the contributions
   NASA Earth science research and satellites are making to understanding this
   dynamic region and predicted what the future holds for the Arctic in a
   changing climate.
   
   published: 05 Feb 2013
   


 * NASA | A SELECTIVE HISTORY OF ARCTIC SEA ICE OBSERVATIONS, PART 2
   
   *Updated: 09/08/14* The study of Arctic sea ice changed forever with the dawn
   of the Space Age and the first Earth-observing satellites. Part 2 of our
   animated timeline picks up where Part 1 left off — with the launch of the
   TIROS weather satellite. This video is public domain and can be downloaded
   at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?11634 Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's
   Goddard Shorts HD podcast:
   http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html Or find NASA Goddard
   Space Flight Center on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NASA.GSFC Or find us
   on Twitter: http://twitter.com/NASAGoddard
   
   published: 08 Sep 2014
   


 * ARCTIC SINKHOLES I FULL DOCUMENTARY I NOVA I PBS
   
   In the Arctic, enormous releases of methane, a potent greenhouse gas,
   threaten the climate. Colossal explosions shake a remote corner of the
   Siberian tundra, leaving behind massive sinkholes. In Alaska, a huge lake
   erupts with bubbles of inflammable gas. Scientists are discovering that these
   mystifying phenomena add up to a ticking time bomb, as long-frozen permafrost
   melts and releases vast amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. What are
   the implications of these dramatic developments in the Arctic? Scientists and
   local communities alike are struggling to grasp the scale of the methane
   threat and what it means for our climate future. Official Website:
   https://to.pbs.org/3AOUzLz Chapters 00:00 Introduction 02:22 Giant Sinkhole
   in Siberia 05:54 Evidence of Methane in Sinkholes 09:...
   
   published: 03 Feb 2022
   


 * ARCTIC: SPACE PROJECTS FOR THE ARCTIC & MORE – 20TH AUG 2024
   
   Arctic space exploration, Norway's plastic contamination, Iceland's
   development of its first wind farm, mercury pollution, Alaska's troubled
   fishing industry, and much more!  Thanks for tuning in! Let us know what you
   think and what we can improve on by emailing us at info@rorshok.com  Like
   what you hear? Subscribe, share, and tell your buds. The Rorshok Ocean
   Update: https://rorshok-ocean-update.captivate.fm Iceland: Energy Country
   Profile: https://ourworldindata.org/energy/country/iceland   We want to get
   to know you! Please fill in this mini survey:
   https://forms.gle/NV3h5jN13cRDp2r66  Wanna avoid ads and help us financially?
   Follow the link: https://bit.ly/rorshok-donate
   
   published: 21 Aug 2024
   


 * SATELLITE TAKES A SPACE-EYE VIEW OF ARCTIC ICE
   
   CryoSat 2 flyby over Greenland (Edmonton) More than 700 kilometres above
   Earth, a recently launched satellite is being readied to provide University
   of Alberta researchers with a new set of eyes for monitoring ice thickness
   across the Arctic. Martin Sharp and Christian Haas, researchers in the U of
   A's Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, will play lead roles making
   sure CryoSat 2, launched earlier this month by the European Space Agency,
   provides accurate readings. Haas will compare CryoSat's calculations of
   sea-ice volume with data he's collected with electronic monitoring equipment
   over the years on numerous low altitude flights. Last spring, Haas zigzagged
   his way across the Arctic, just 60 metres above the sea ice, covering the
   vast area between Greenland and Alaska....
   
   published: 29 Apr 2010
   


 * EXPLORING THE ARCTIC FROM SPACE (17 JAN 2012)
   
   Dr Katharine Giles (UCL Centre for Polar Observation & Modelling) The
   Arctic's supposed promise of abundant natural resources, shipping routes and
   scientific discoveries, has a long held fascination for those prepared to
   brave its harsh environment. With climate models predicting that the Polar
   Regions are the most sensitive to climate change, our need to understand them
   becomes increasingly important. The sub-zero temperatures and inhospitable
   icescapes faced by explorers also present problems to scientists collecting
   data. This lecture focuses on how satellites can help us understand the
   changing Arctic, and also comes back down to Earth to show UCL scientists
   stepping out onto the frozen ocean to validate the European Space Agency's
   CryoSat-2 satellite, which is designed to measur...
   
   published: 19 Jan 2012
   


 * #SPACEX #FALCON9 DEPLOYS ARCTIC BROADBAND SATELLITES FROM ORBIT 🚀 SUCCESSFUL
   #ASBM DEPLOYMENT!
   
   Witness the stunning deployment of the Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission
   (ASBM) satellites as captured by the onboard camera on SpaceX’s Falcon 9
   rocket. Launched on August 11, 2024, this mission marks a critical step in
   providing military and commercial broadband communication to the northern
   polar regions. The ASBM-1 and ASBM-2 satellites were successfully released
   into a highly elliptical orbit, designed to offer 24/7 secure communication
   for U.S. forces and commercial users in the Arctic. This footage offers a
   rare, up-close look at the moment these crucial satellites were deployed from
   the second stage of the Falcon 9 rocket, continuing SpaceX's legacy of
   groundbreaking achievements in space exploration. CONNECT WITH ME HERE: Bio:
   https://overlookhorizon.com/bio Become a Member: ht...
   
   published: 12 Aug 2024
   


 * EARTH FROM SPACE: GATEWAY TO THE ARCTIC
   
   Earth from Space is presented by Kelsea Brennan-Wessels from the ESA Web-TV
   virtual studios. See where the first person to fly an aeroplane in the Arctic
   took off from on his pioneering flights in the fifty-first edition. Use the
   following link to view and download the full size image:
   http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth/Earth_from_Space_Gateway_to_the_Arctic
   
   published: 25 Jan 2013
   


 * HISTORIC SPACE MISSIONS & IMPLICATIONS
   
   민간인 우주 유영, 극지 탐사 등 역사적 우주 미션들 Good evening and thank you for joining us. I'm
   Han Da-eun in Seoul. The world is about to witness another significant
   milestone in the evolution of human space exploration. SpaceX’s daring space
   mission the ‘Polaris Dawn’ will send four astronauts into orbit aboard its
   Crew Dragon capsule for humanity’s first commercial spacewalk. And the
   mission will include a lot more than that, venturing into high Earth orbit
   and testing some 40 groundbreaking space experiments. SpaceX has also
   unveiled plans to fly in a polar orbit, a feat never before attempted with
   humans on board. Meanwhile, South Korea’s space endeavors are also making
   notable strides launching the mission of the country’s first surveillance
   satellite, and deploying AI processors into space. To del...
   
   published: 27 Aug 2024
   


 * ARCTIC: THE LAND OF MIDNIGHT SUN | #MULTIFRONT #SHORTS
   
   Arctic: The Land of Midnight Sun #multifront #shorts #norway #trending
   #current #northpole
   
   published: 24 Aug 2022
   

PreviousNext

developed with YouTube

24:46


SCIENCE UNCUT: "ARCTIC ON THE EDGE?"

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 24:46
 * Uploaded Date: 05 Feb 2013
 * views: 4229

NASA's Tom Wagner hosts an informal discussion with ice scientists about the
major changes seen in the Arctic during 2012 -- shrinking sea ice, melting of
the G...
NASA's Tom Wagner hosts an informal discussion with ice scientists about the
major changes seen in the Arctic during 2012 -- shrinking sea ice, melting of
the Greenland ice sheet, and more. The program highlights the contributions NASA
Earth science research and satellites are making to understanding this dynamic
region and predicted what the future holds for the Arctic in a changing climate.
https://wn.com/Science_Uncut_Arctic_On_The_Edge

NASA's Tom Wagner hosts an informal discussion with ice scientists about the
major changes seen in the Arctic during 2012 -- shrinking sea ice, melting of
the Greenland ice sheet, and more. The program highlights the contributions NASA
Earth science research and satellites are making to understanding this dynamic
region and predicted what the future holds for the Arctic in a changing climate.

 * published: 05 Feb 2013
 * views: 4229

3:32


NASA | A SELECTIVE HISTORY OF ARCTIC SEA ICE OBSERVATIONS, PART 2

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 3:32
 * Uploaded Date: 08 Sep 2014
 * views: 15465

*Updated: 09/08/14* The study of Arctic sea ice changed forever with the dawn of
the Space Age and the first Earth-observing satellites. Part 2 of our
animated...
*Updated: 09/08/14* The study of Arctic sea ice changed forever with the dawn of
the Space Age and the first Earth-observing satellites. Part 2 of our animated
timeline picks up where Part 1 left off — with the launch of the TIROS weather
satellite. This video is public domain and can be downloaded at:
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?11634 Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard
Shorts HD podcast: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html Or find
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NASA.GSFC
Or find us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/NASAGoddard
https://wn.com/Nasa_|_A_Selective_History_Of_Arctic_Sea_Ice_Observations,_Part_2

*Updated: 09/08/14* The study of Arctic sea ice changed forever with the dawn of
the Space Age and the first Earth-observing satellites. Part 2 of our animated
timeline picks up where Part 1 left off — with the launch of the TIROS weather
satellite. This video is public domain and can be downloaded at:
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?11634 Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard
Shorts HD podcast: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html Or find
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NASA.GSFC
Or find us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/NASAGoddard

 * published: 08 Sep 2014
 * views: 15465

53:28


ARCTIC SINKHOLES I FULL DOCUMENTARY I NOVA I PBS

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 53:28
 * Uploaded Date: 03 Feb 2022
 * views: 14050821

In the Arctic, enormous releases of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, threaten
the climate. Colossal explosions shake a remote corner of the Siberian tundra,
l...
In the Arctic, enormous releases of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, threaten
the climate. Colossal explosions shake a remote corner of the Siberian tundra,
leaving behind massive sinkholes. In Alaska, a huge lake erupts with bubbles of
inflammable gas. Scientists are discovering that these mystifying phenomena add
up to a ticking time bomb, as long-frozen permafrost melts and releases vast
amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. What are the implications of these
dramatic developments in the Arctic? Scientists and local communities alike are
struggling to grasp the scale of the methane threat and what it means for our
climate future. Official Website: https://to.pbs.org/3AOUzLz Chapters 00:00
Introduction 02:22 Giant Sinkhole in Siberia 05:54 Evidence of Methane in
Sinkholes 09:02 Alaskan Lake Bubbling 14:47 Effects of Permafrost Thaw on
Climate 17:26 Native Alaskan Solutions to Permafrost 21:37 Organic Matter
Impacted by Permafrost 24:44 Greenhouse Gasses Emitted from Permafrost Thaw
33:37 Fossil Methane in Earth’s Crust 42:19 Arctic Regions are Sinking 47:47 How
Communities are Finding Solutions to Permafrost Melting 50:15 Conclusion
(Premiered Wednesday, February 2 at 9PM ET on PBS.) © 2022 WGBH Educational
Foundation All rights reserved This program was produced by GBH, which is solely
responsible for its content. Some funders of NOVA also fund basic science
research. Experts featured in this film may have received support from funders
of this program. Funding for NOVA is provided by Brilliant.org, the David H.
Koch Fund for Science, the NOVA Science Trust, the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, and PBS viewers. This program is made possible by viewers like
you. Support your local PBS station here: https://pbs.org/donate/ Enjoy full
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Shop: https://shop.pbs.org/ sinkhole opening up, permafrost discoveries,
sinkhole caught on tape, sinkhole full movie, sinkhole docmentary, sinkhole
compilation, what is a sinkhole, sinkhole swallows, what is permafrost, siberian
permafrost, permafrost melting #sinkhole #documentary #permafrost #novapbs
#climatechange #methane #greenhousegases
https://wn.com/Arctic_Sinkholes_I_Full_Documentary_I_Nova_I_Pbs

In the Arctic, enormous releases of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, threaten
the climate. Colossal explosions shake a remote corner of the Siberian tundra,
leaving behind massive sinkholes. In Alaska, a huge lake erupts with bubbles of
inflammable gas. Scientists are discovering that these mystifying phenomena add
up to a ticking time bomb, as long-frozen permafrost melts and releases vast
amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. What are the implications of these
dramatic developments in the Arctic? Scientists and local communities alike are
struggling to grasp the scale of the methane threat and what it means for our
climate future. Official Website: https://to.pbs.org/3AOUzLz Chapters 00:00
Introduction 02:22 Giant Sinkhole in Siberia 05:54 Evidence of Methane in
Sinkholes 09:02 Alaskan Lake Bubbling 14:47 Effects of Permafrost Thaw on
Climate 17:26 Native Alaskan Solutions to Permafrost 21:37 Organic Matter
Impacted by Permafrost 24:44 Greenhouse Gasses Emitted from Permafrost Thaw
33:37 Fossil Methane in Earth’s Crust 42:19 Arctic Regions are Sinking 47:47 How
Communities are Finding Solutions to Permafrost Melting 50:15 Conclusion
(Premiered Wednesday, February 2 at 9PM ET on PBS.) © 2022 WGBH Educational
Foundation All rights reserved This program was produced by GBH, which is solely
responsible for its content. Some funders of NOVA also fund basic science
research. Experts featured in this film may have received support from funders
of this program. Funding for NOVA is provided by Brilliant.org, the David H.
Koch Fund for Science, the NOVA Science Trust, the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, and PBS viewers. This program is made possible by viewers like
you. Support your local PBS station here: https://pbs.org/donate/ Enjoy full
episodes of your favorite PBS shows anytime, anywhere with the free PBS Video
app: https://to.pbs.org/2QbtzhR Stay up to date on the latest science
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permafrost, permafrost melting #sinkhole #documentary #permafrost #novapbs
#climatechange #methane #greenhousegases

 * published: 03 Feb 2022
 * views: 14050821

8:06


ARCTIC: SPACE PROJECTS FOR THE ARCTIC & MORE – 20TH AUG 2024

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 8:06
 * Uploaded Date: 21 Aug 2024
 * views: 7

Arctic space exploration, Norway's plastic contamination, Iceland's development
of its first wind farm, mercury pollution, Alaska's troubled fishing industry,
a...
Arctic space exploration, Norway's plastic contamination, Iceland's development
of its first wind farm, mercury pollution, Alaska's troubled fishing industry,
and much more!  Thanks for tuning in! Let us know what you think and what we can
improve on by emailing us at info@rorshok.com  Like what you hear? Subscribe,
share, and tell your buds. The Rorshok Ocean Update:
https://rorshok-ocean-update.captivate.fm Iceland: Energy Country Profile:
https://ourworldindata.org/energy/country/iceland   We want to get to know you!
Please fill in this mini survey: https://forms.gle/NV3h5jN13cRDp2r66  Wanna
avoid ads and help us financially? Follow the link:
https://bit.ly/rorshok-donate
https://wn.com/Arctic_Space_Projects_For_The_Arctic_More_–_20Th_Aug_2024

Arctic space exploration, Norway's plastic contamination, Iceland's development
of its first wind farm, mercury pollution, Alaska's troubled fishing industry,
and much more!  Thanks for tuning in! Let us know what you think and what we can
improve on by emailing us at info@rorshok.com  Like what you hear? Subscribe,
share, and tell your buds. The Rorshok Ocean Update:
https://rorshok-ocean-update.captivate.fm Iceland: Energy Country Profile:
https://ourworldindata.org/energy/country/iceland   We want to get to know you!
Please fill in this mini survey: https://forms.gle/NV3h5jN13cRDp2r66  Wanna
avoid ads and help us financially? Follow the link:
https://bit.ly/rorshok-donate

 * published: 21 Aug 2024
 * views: 7

0:20


SATELLITE TAKES A SPACE-EYE VIEW OF ARCTIC ICE

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 0:20
 * Uploaded Date: 29 Apr 2010
 * views: 3441

CryoSat 2 flyby over Greenland (Edmonton) More than 700 kilometres above Earth,
a recently launched satellite is being readied to provide University of Alber...
CryoSat 2 flyby over Greenland (Edmonton) More than 700 kilometres above Earth,
a recently launched satellite is being readied to provide University of Alberta
researchers with a new set of eyes for monitoring ice thickness across the
Arctic. Martin Sharp and Christian Haas, researchers in the U of A's Department
of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, will play lead roles making sure CryoSat 2,
launched earlier this month by the European Space Agency, provides accurate
readings. Haas will compare CryoSat's calculations of sea-ice volume with data
he's collected with electronic monitoring equipment over the years on numerous
low altitude flights. Last spring, Haas zigzagged his way across the Arctic,
just 60 metres above the sea ice, covering the vast area between Greenland and
Alaska. Haas will update his own research next month with a series of helicopter
flights over the ice. Haas says Cryosat 2's readings will be validated over the
next six months and expects that its results will go online this fall. "The
satellite will provide updated Arctic-wide data once every month," said Haas.
"The satellite will compliment the research that I and others will continue with
and the result will be a total picture of seasonal variations of the ice." Haas
explains this orbiting technology has a distinct advantage over Arctic research
done on foot or from low flying aircraft, because it's weather proof. "CryoSat
uses radar telemetry which can see through any kind of weather and cloud cover,"
said Haas. CryoSat 2 isn't the first satellite to measure ice thickness at both
poles. Last fall, an American satellite called ICESAT suddenly stopped working
after nearly six years in orbit. In 2005, the European Space Agency launched
CryoSat 1, but that mission ended badly with a launch failure a couple of
minutes after blast off. Haas says things are so far, so good, with this
European Space Agency mission. The life expectancy of CryoSat 2 is three to five
years. While Haas focuses his work on sea ice, Sharp will work to validate the
satellite's reading of land-based ice sheets. Sharp says that while previous
radar telemetry surveys of Arctic land masses focused on large land forms like
Greenland, CryoSat 2 will include data from smaller ice formations covering
islands in the Canadian Arctic. "We have evidence that in the last decade the
ice-mass loss in the Canadian Arctic has gone up from 15 cubic kilometres a year
to close to 100," said Sharp. "As far as we can tell most of this is from
surface melt, but we couldn't tell that from previous satellite surveys." The
new satellite will provide the detailed measurements of ice sheets covering
rough terrain, which Sharp says is especially important along the steep edges of
ice sheets where the highest rate of melting occurs. To validate the satellite's
coverage of ice sheets on land, members of Sharp's team will stand on Devon
Island, located in Baffin Bay, Nunavut, and synchronize their watches with a
survey aircraft fly-by and the CryoSat 2 satellite out on the edge of space.
Readings from all three sources will be compared. "We're going to try and get as
close to a real time as we can with all the measurements." Looking to the future
of polar research, Sharp already has concerns about the continuity of satellite
coverage when CryoSat's lifecycle comes to an end. "Do we keep putting
satellites up or do we allow big gaps in our coverage of the Arctic," said
Sharp. "Those are the key, high-level decisions that space agencies have to
make."
https://wn.com/Satellite_Takes_A_Space_Eye_View_Of_Arctic_Ice

CryoSat 2 flyby over Greenland (Edmonton) More than 700 kilometres above Earth,
a recently launched satellite is being readied to provide University of Alberta
researchers with a new set of eyes for monitoring ice thickness across the
Arctic. Martin Sharp and Christian Haas, researchers in the U of A's Department
of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, will play lead roles making sure CryoSat 2,
launched earlier this month by the European Space Agency, provides accurate
readings. Haas will compare CryoSat's calculations of sea-ice volume with data
he's collected with electronic monitoring equipment over the years on numerous
low altitude flights. Last spring, Haas zigzagged his way across the Arctic,
just 60 metres above the sea ice, covering the vast area between Greenland and
Alaska. Haas will update his own research next month with a series of helicopter
flights over the ice. Haas says Cryosat 2's readings will be validated over the
next six months and expects that its results will go online this fall. "The
satellite will provide updated Arctic-wide data once every month," said Haas.
"The satellite will compliment the research that I and others will continue with
and the result will be a total picture of seasonal variations of the ice." Haas
explains this orbiting technology has a distinct advantage over Arctic research
done on foot or from low flying aircraft, because it's weather proof. "CryoSat
uses radar telemetry which can see through any kind of weather and cloud cover,"
said Haas. CryoSat 2 isn't the first satellite to measure ice thickness at both
poles. Last fall, an American satellite called ICESAT suddenly stopped working
after nearly six years in orbit. In 2005, the European Space Agency launched
CryoSat 1, but that mission ended badly with a launch failure a couple of
minutes after blast off. Haas says things are so far, so good, with this
European Space Agency mission. The life expectancy of CryoSat 2 is three to five
years. While Haas focuses his work on sea ice, Sharp will work to validate the
satellite's reading of land-based ice sheets. Sharp says that while previous
radar telemetry surveys of Arctic land masses focused on large land forms like
Greenland, CryoSat 2 will include data from smaller ice formations covering
islands in the Canadian Arctic. "We have evidence that in the last decade the
ice-mass loss in the Canadian Arctic has gone up from 15 cubic kilometres a year
to close to 100," said Sharp. "As far as we can tell most of this is from
surface melt, but we couldn't tell that from previous satellite surveys." The
new satellite will provide the detailed measurements of ice sheets covering
rough terrain, which Sharp says is especially important along the steep edges of
ice sheets where the highest rate of melting occurs. To validate the satellite's
coverage of ice sheets on land, members of Sharp's team will stand on Devon
Island, located in Baffin Bay, Nunavut, and synchronize their watches with a
survey aircraft fly-by and the CryoSat 2 satellite out on the edge of space.
Readings from all three sources will be compared. "We're going to try and get as
close to a real time as we can with all the measurements." Looking to the future
of polar research, Sharp already has concerns about the continuity of satellite
coverage when CryoSat's lifecycle comes to an end. "Do we keep putting
satellites up or do we allow big gaps in our coverage of the Arctic," said
Sharp. "Those are the key, high-level decisions that space agencies have to
make."

 * published: 29 Apr 2010
 * views: 3441

37:24


EXPLORING THE ARCTIC FROM SPACE (17 JAN 2012)

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 37:24
 * Uploaded Date: 19 Jan 2012
 * views: 5453

Dr Katharine Giles (UCL Centre for Polar Observation & Modelling) The Arctic's
supposed promise of abundant natural resources, shipping routes and
scientific...
Dr Katharine Giles (UCL Centre for Polar Observation & Modelling) The Arctic's
supposed promise of abundant natural resources, shipping routes and scientific
discoveries, has a long held fascination for those prepared to brave its harsh
environment. With climate models predicting that the Polar Regions are the most
sensitive to climate change, our need to understand them becomes increasingly
important. The sub-zero temperatures and inhospitable icescapes faced by
explorers also present problems to scientists collecting data. This lecture
focuses on how satellites can help us understand the changing Arctic, and also
comes back down to Earth to show UCL scientists stepping out onto the frozen
ocean to validate the European Space Agency's CryoSat-2 satellite, which is
designed to measure changes in the ice cover with unprecedented accuracy.
https://wn.com/Exploring_The_Arctic_From_Space_(17_Jan_2012)

Dr Katharine Giles (UCL Centre for Polar Observation & Modelling) The Arctic's
supposed promise of abundant natural resources, shipping routes and scientific
discoveries, has a long held fascination for those prepared to brave its harsh
environment. With climate models predicting that the Polar Regions are the most
sensitive to climate change, our need to understand them becomes increasingly
important. The sub-zero temperatures and inhospitable icescapes faced by
explorers also present problems to scientists collecting data. This lecture
focuses on how satellites can help us understand the changing Arctic, and also
comes back down to Earth to show UCL scientists stepping out onto the frozen
ocean to validate the European Space Agency's CryoSat-2 satellite, which is
designed to measure changes in the ice cover with unprecedented accuracy.

 * published: 19 Jan 2012
 * views: 5453

0:17


#SPACEX #FALCON9 DEPLOYS ARCTIC BROADBAND SATELLITES FROM ORBIT 🚀 SUCCESSFUL
#ASBM DEPLOYMENT!

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 0:17
 * Uploaded Date: 12 Aug 2024
 * views: 2356

Witness the stunning deployment of the Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission (ASBM)
satellites as captured by the onboard camera on SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket.
Launc...
Witness the stunning deployment of the Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission (ASBM)
satellites as captured by the onboard camera on SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket.
Launched on August 11, 2024, this mission marks a critical step in providing
military and commercial broadband communication to the northern polar regions.
The ASBM-1 and ASBM-2 satellites were successfully released into a highly
elliptical orbit, designed to offer 24/7 secure communication for U.S. forces
and commercial users in the Arctic. This footage offers a rare, up-close look at
the moment these crucial satellites were deployed from the second stage of the
Falcon 9 rocket, continuing SpaceX's legacy of groundbreaking achievements in
space exploration. CONNECT WITH ME HERE: Bio: https://overlookhorizon.com/bio
Become a Member: https://youtube.com/OLHZN/join Twitter:
https://twitter.com/OLHZN TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@olhzn Facebook:
https://facebook.com/overlookhorizon Patreon:
https://patreon.com/overlookhorizon Discord: https://discord.gg/vxnAf4T
LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/olhzn Instagram:
https://instagram.com/olhzn Twitch: https://twitch.tv/olhzn Website:
https://overlookhorizon.com Jetstreams & Rocket Dreams Podcast:
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/olhzn
https://wn.com/Spacex_Falcon9_Deploys_Arctic_Broadband_Satellites_From_Orbit_🚀_Successful_Asbm_Deployment

Witness the stunning deployment of the Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission (ASBM)
satellites as captured by the onboard camera on SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket.
Launched on August 11, 2024, this mission marks a critical step in providing
military and commercial broadband communication to the northern polar regions.
The ASBM-1 and ASBM-2 satellites were successfully released into a highly
elliptical orbit, designed to offer 24/7 secure communication for U.S. forces
and commercial users in the Arctic. This footage offers a rare, up-close look at
the moment these crucial satellites were deployed from the second stage of the
Falcon 9 rocket, continuing SpaceX's legacy of groundbreaking achievements in
space exploration. CONNECT WITH ME HERE: Bio: https://overlookhorizon.com/bio
Become a Member: https://youtube.com/OLHZN/join Twitter:
https://twitter.com/OLHZN TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@olhzn Facebook:
https://facebook.com/overlookhorizon Patreon:
https://patreon.com/overlookhorizon Discord: https://discord.gg/vxnAf4T
LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/company/olhzn Instagram:
https://instagram.com/olhzn Twitch: https://twitch.tv/olhzn Website:
https://overlookhorizon.com Jetstreams & Rocket Dreams Podcast:
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/olhzn

 * published: 12 Aug 2024
 * views: 2356

2:52


EARTH FROM SPACE: GATEWAY TO THE ARCTIC

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 2:52
 * Uploaded Date: 25 Jan 2013
 * views: 2795

Earth from Space is presented by Kelsea Brennan-Wessels from the ESA Web-TV
virtual studios. See where the first person to fly an aeroplane in the Arctic
took o...
Earth from Space is presented by Kelsea Brennan-Wessels from the ESA Web-TV
virtual studios. See where the first person to fly an aeroplane in the Arctic
took off from on his pioneering flights in the fifty-first edition. Use the
following link to view and download the full size image:
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth/Earth_from_Space_Gateway_to_the_Arctic
https://wn.com/Earth_From_Space_Gateway_To_The_Arctic

Earth from Space is presented by Kelsea Brennan-Wessels from the ESA Web-TV
virtual studios. See where the first person to fly an aeroplane in the Arctic
took off from on his pioneering flights in the fifty-first edition. Use the
following link to view and download the full size image:
http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth/Earth_from_Space_Gateway_to_the_Arctic

 * published: 25 Jan 2013
 * views: 2795

23:11


HISTORIC SPACE MISSIONS & IMPLICATIONS

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 23:11
 * Uploaded Date: 27 Aug 2024
 * views: 162

민간인 우주 유영, 극지 탐사 등 역사적 우주 미션들 Good evening and thank you for joining us. I'm Han
Da-eun in Seoul. The world is about to witness another significant milestone
i...
민간인 우주 유영, 극지 탐사 등 역사적 우주 미션들 Good evening and thank you for joining us. I'm Han
Da-eun in Seoul. The world is about to witness another significant milestone in
the evolution of human space exploration. SpaceX’s daring space mission the
‘Polaris Dawn’ will send four astronauts into orbit aboard its Crew Dragon
capsule for humanity’s first commercial spacewalk. And the mission will include
a lot more than that, venturing into high Earth orbit and testing some 40
groundbreaking space experiments. SpaceX has also unveiled plans to fly in a
polar orbit, a feat never before attempted with humans on board. Meanwhile,
South Korea’s space endeavors are also making notable strides launching the
mission of the country’s first surveillance satellite, and deploying AI
processors into space. To delve deeper into these exciting developments, we’re
joined by Park Si-soo, Seoul Bureau Chief of SpaceNews. Joining us from the U.S.
is Wendy Whitman Cobb, Professor of Strategy and Security Studies at School of
Advanced Air and Space Studies. (PARK) Q1. "Polaris Dawn" is expected to be a
historic commercial spacewalk mission. First, tell us more about it. (WHITMAN
COBB) Q2. The Polaris Dawn mission has been delayed again, and is now scheduled
to lift off early Wednesday morning, local time. What caused the delay, and give
us latest updates on the launch preparations. (WHITMAN COBB) Q3. Tell us about
the significance of the ‘Polaris Dawn’ mission. How would the commercial
spacewalk contribute to future space exploration, and what does reaching the
highest Earth orbit ever achieved by humans mean to the space industry? (PARK)
Q4. The Polaris Dawn mission will open a new chapter in private space flight.
What are your prospects for SpaceX’s capabilities in future commercial space
programs? (WHITMAN COBB) Q5. Meanwhile, what should’ve been a weeklong test
flight for two NASA astronauts has now been extended to over eight months. NASA
says it’s too risky to bring them back to Earth in Boeing’s troubled new
capsule, and they’ll have to wait until next year for a ride home with SpaceX.
What’s wrong with the Boeing capsule, and why do they have to wait for so long
for their next ride home? (PARK) Q6. Back here at home, South Korea has signed a
contract with SpaceX to launch a multipurpose communications satellite,
‘Cheollian 3’ to geostationary orbit in the second half of 2027. Give us more
details on this. +Also tell us a bit about South Korea’s expanding partnership
with SpaceX. (WHITMAN COBB) Q7. Another historic mission under preparation by
SpaceX– it has unveiled a polar orbit mission backed by crypto magnate Chun
Wang. Can you elaborate on this mission and share your outlook on its prospects?
(PARK) Q8. South Korea's first reconnaissance satellite launched at the end of
last year, has been certified as ‘combat fit'. What mission would it focus on
from now on, and also give us the latest updates on the second surveillance
satellite launched in April? (PARK) Q9. Korea’s satellite startup TelePIX has
announced that it sent its high-performance artificial intelligence processor
for satellites into space. The processor, called TetraPLEX, will help in
transmitting large amounts of data to ground stations for processing. Give us
more details on this, and your thoughts on the role of AI in the space industry.
And that brings us to the end of this show. Thank you for watching, and be sure
to tune in same time tomorrow to join our conversation. Good bye for now.
#UnitedStates #Space #Spacewalk #Polaris_Dawn #SpaceX #우주 #우주_유영 #스페이스X #폴라리스던
#Arirang_News #아리랑뉴스 📣 Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/arirangtvnews 📣
Twitter : https://twitter.com/arirangtvnews 📣 Homepage :
https://v2.arirang.com/ 2024-08-27, 18:30 (KST)
https://wn.com/Historic_Space_Missions_Implications

민간인 우주 유영, 극지 탐사 등 역사적 우주 미션들 Good evening and thank you for joining us. I'm Han
Da-eun in Seoul. The world is about to witness another significant milestone in
the evolution of human space exploration. SpaceX’s daring space mission the
‘Polaris Dawn’ will send four astronauts into orbit aboard its Crew Dragon
capsule for humanity’s first commercial spacewalk. And the mission will include
a lot more than that, venturing into high Earth orbit and testing some 40
groundbreaking space experiments. SpaceX has also unveiled plans to fly in a
polar orbit, a feat never before attempted with humans on board. Meanwhile,
South Korea’s space endeavors are also making notable strides launching the
mission of the country’s first surveillance satellite, and deploying AI
processors into space. To delve deeper into these exciting developments, we’re
joined by Park Si-soo, Seoul Bureau Chief of SpaceNews. Joining us from the U.S.
is Wendy Whitman Cobb, Professor of Strategy and Security Studies at School of
Advanced Air and Space Studies. (PARK) Q1. "Polaris Dawn" is expected to be a
historic commercial spacewalk mission. First, tell us more about it. (WHITMAN
COBB) Q2. The Polaris Dawn mission has been delayed again, and is now scheduled
to lift off early Wednesday morning, local time. What caused the delay, and give
us latest updates on the launch preparations. (WHITMAN COBB) Q3. Tell us about
the significance of the ‘Polaris Dawn’ mission. How would the commercial
spacewalk contribute to future space exploration, and what does reaching the
highest Earth orbit ever achieved by humans mean to the space industry? (PARK)
Q4. The Polaris Dawn mission will open a new chapter in private space flight.
What are your prospects for SpaceX’s capabilities in future commercial space
programs? (WHITMAN COBB) Q5. Meanwhile, what should’ve been a weeklong test
flight for two NASA astronauts has now been extended to over eight months. NASA
says it’s too risky to bring them back to Earth in Boeing’s troubled new
capsule, and they’ll have to wait until next year for a ride home with SpaceX.
What’s wrong with the Boeing capsule, and why do they have to wait for so long
for their next ride home? (PARK) Q6. Back here at home, South Korea has signed a
contract with SpaceX to launch a multipurpose communications satellite,
‘Cheollian 3’ to geostationary orbit in the second half of 2027. Give us more
details on this. +Also tell us a bit about South Korea’s expanding partnership
with SpaceX. (WHITMAN COBB) Q7. Another historic mission under preparation by
SpaceX– it has unveiled a polar orbit mission backed by crypto magnate Chun
Wang. Can you elaborate on this mission and share your outlook on its prospects?
(PARK) Q8. South Korea's first reconnaissance satellite launched at the end of
last year, has been certified as ‘combat fit'. What mission would it focus on
from now on, and also give us the latest updates on the second surveillance
satellite launched in April? (PARK) Q9. Korea’s satellite startup TelePIX has
announced that it sent its high-performance artificial intelligence processor
for satellites into space. The processor, called TetraPLEX, will help in
transmitting large amounts of data to ground stations for processing. Give us
more details on this, and your thoughts on the role of AI in the space industry.
And that brings us to the end of this show. Thank you for watching, and be sure
to tune in same time tomorrow to join our conversation. Good bye for now.
#UnitedStates #Space #Spacewalk #Polaris_Dawn #SpaceX #우주 #우주_유영 #스페이스X #폴라리스던
#Arirang_News #아리랑뉴스 📣 Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/arirangtvnews 📣
Twitter : https://twitter.com/arirangtvnews 📣 Homepage :
https://v2.arirang.com/ 2024-08-27, 18:30 (KST)

 * published: 27 Aug 2024
 * views: 162

0:16


ARCTIC: THE LAND OF MIDNIGHT SUN | #MULTIFRONT #SHORTS

 * Order: Reorder
 * Duration: 0:16
 * Uploaded Date: 24 Aug 2022
 * views: 327790

Arctic: The Land of Midnight Sun #multifront #shorts #norway #trending #current
#northpole
Arctic: The Land of Midnight Sun #multifront #shorts #norway #trending #current
#northpole
https://wn.com/Arctic_The_Land_Of_Midnight_Sun_|_Multifront_Shorts

Arctic: The Land of Midnight Sun #multifront #shorts #norway #trending #current
#northpole

 * published: 24 Aug 2022
 * views: 327790


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 * Reorder
   24:46
   Science Uncut: "Arctic on the Edge?"
   remove from playlistshare this video
   
   
   
   SCIENCE UNCUT: "ARCTIC ON THE EDGE?"
   
    * Report rights infringement
    * published: 05 Feb 2013
    * views: 4229
   
   NASA's Tom Wagner hosts an informal discussion with ice scientists about the
   major changes seen in the Arctic during 2012 -- shrinking sea ice, melting of
   the Greenland ice sheet, and more. The program highlights the contributions
   NASA Earth science research and satellites are making to understanding this
   dynamic region and predicted what the future holds for the Arctic in a
   changing climate.
    * Show More

 * Reorder
   3:32
   NASA | A Selective History of Arctic Sea Ice Observations, Part 2
   remove from playlistshare this video
   
   
   
   NASA | A SELECTIVE HISTORY OF ARCTIC SEA ICE OBSERVATIONS, PART 2
   
    * Report rights infringement
    * published: 08 Sep 2014
    * views: 15465
   
   *Updated: 09/08/14* The study of Arctic sea ice changed forever with the dawn
   of the Space Age and the first Earth-observing satellites. Part 2 of our
   animated timeline picks up where Part 1 left off — with the launch of the
   TIROS weather satellite. This video is public domain and can be downloaded
   at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?11634 Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's
   Goddard Shorts HD podcast:
   http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html Or find NASA Goddard
   Space Flight Center on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NASA.GSFC Or find us
   on Twitter: http://twitter.com/NASAGoddard
    * Show More

 * Reorder
   53:28
   Arctic Sinkholes I Full Documentary I NOVA I PBS
   remove from playlistshare this video
   
   
   
   ARCTIC SINKHOLES I FULL DOCUMENTARY I NOVA I PBS
   
    * Report rights infringement
    * published: 03 Feb 2022
    * views: 14050821
   
   In the Arctic, enormous releases of methane, a potent greenhouse gas,
   threaten the climate. Colossal explosions shake a remote corner of the
   Siberian tundra, leaving behind massive sinkholes. In Alaska, a huge lake
   erupts with bubbles of inflammable gas. Scientists are discovering that these
   mystifying phenomena add up to a ticking time bomb, as long-frozen permafrost
   melts and releases vast amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. What are
   the implications of these dramatic developments in the Arctic? Scientists and
   local communities alike are struggling to grasp the scale of the methane
   threat and what it means for our climate future. Official Website:
   https://to.pbs.org/3AOUzLz Chapters 00:00 Introduction 02:22 Giant Sinkhole
   in Siberia 05:54 Evidence of Methane in Sinkholes 09:02 Alaskan Lake Bubbling
   14:47 Effects of Permafrost Thaw on Climate 17:26 Native Alaskan Solutions to
   Permafrost 21:37 Organic Matter Impacted by Permafrost 24:44 Greenhouse
   Gasses Emitted from Permafrost Thaw 33:37 Fossil Methane in Earth’s Crust
   42:19 Arctic Regions are Sinking 47:47 How Communities are Finding Solutions
   to Permafrost Melting 50:15 Conclusion (Premiered Wednesday, February 2 at
   9PM ET on PBS.) © 2022 WGBH Educational Foundation All rights reserved This
   program was produced by GBH, which is solely responsible for its content.
   Some funders of NOVA also fund basic science research. Experts featured in
   this film may have received support from funders of this program. Funding for
   NOVA is provided by Brilliant.org, the David H. Koch Fund for Science, the
   NOVA Science Trust, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and PBS viewers.
   This program is made possible by viewers like you. Support your local PBS
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   up, permafrost discoveries, sinkhole caught on tape, sinkhole full movie,
   sinkhole docmentary, sinkhole compilation, what is a sinkhole, sinkhole
   swallows, what is permafrost, siberian permafrost, permafrost melting
   #sinkhole #documentary #permafrost #novapbs #climatechange #methane
   #greenhousegases
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   8:06
   ARCTIC: Space Projects for the Arctic & more – 20th Aug 2024
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   ARCTIC: SPACE PROJECTS FOR THE ARCTIC & MORE – 20TH AUG 2024
   
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    * published: 21 Aug 2024
    * views: 7
   
   Arctic space exploration, Norway's plastic contamination, Iceland's
   development of its first wind farm, mercury pollution, Alaska's troubled
   fishing industry, and much more!  Thanks for tuning in! Let us know what you
   think and what we can improve on by emailing us at info@rorshok.com  Like
   what you hear? Subscribe, share, and tell your buds. The Rorshok Ocean
   Update: https://rorshok-ocean-update.captivate.fm Iceland: Energy Country
   Profile: https://ourworldindata.org/energy/country/iceland   We want to get
   to know you! Please fill in this mini survey:
   https://forms.gle/NV3h5jN13cRDp2r66  Wanna avoid ads and help us financially?
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   0:20
   Satellite takes a space-eye view of Arctic ice
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   SATELLITE TAKES A SPACE-EYE VIEW OF ARCTIC ICE
   
    * Report rights infringement
    * published: 29 Apr 2010
    * views: 3441
   
   CryoSat 2 flyby over Greenland (Edmonton) More than 700 kilometres above
   Earth, a recently launched satellite is being readied to provide University
   of Alberta researchers with a new set of eyes for monitoring ice thickness
   across the Arctic. Martin Sharp and Christian Haas, researchers in the U of
   A's Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, will play lead roles making
   sure CryoSat 2, launched earlier this month by the European Space Agency,
   provides accurate readings. Haas will compare CryoSat's calculations of
   sea-ice volume with data he's collected with electronic monitoring equipment
   over the years on numerous low altitude flights. Last spring, Haas zigzagged
   his way across the Arctic, just 60 metres above the sea ice, covering the
   vast area between Greenland and Alaska. Haas will update his own research
   next month with a series of helicopter flights over the ice. Haas says
   Cryosat 2's readings will be validated over the next six months and expects
   that its results will go online this fall. "The satellite will provide
   updated Arctic-wide data once every month," said Haas. "The satellite will
   compliment the research that I and others will continue with and the result
   will be a total picture of seasonal variations of the ice." Haas explains
   this orbiting technology has a distinct advantage over Arctic research done
   on foot or from low flying aircraft, because it's weather proof. "CryoSat
   uses radar telemetry which can see through any kind of weather and cloud
   cover," said Haas. CryoSat 2 isn't the first satellite to measure ice
   thickness at both poles. Last fall, an American satellite called ICESAT
   suddenly stopped working after nearly six years in orbit. In 2005, the
   European Space Agency launched CryoSat 1, but that mission ended badly with a
   launch failure a couple of minutes after blast off. Haas says things are so
   far, so good, with this European Space Agency mission. The life expectancy of
   CryoSat 2 is three to five years. While Haas focuses his work on sea ice,
   Sharp will work to validate the satellite's reading of land-based ice sheets.
   Sharp says that while previous radar telemetry surveys of Arctic land masses
   focused on large land forms like Greenland, CryoSat 2 will include data from
   smaller ice formations covering islands in the Canadian Arctic. "We have
   evidence that in the last decade the ice-mass loss in the Canadian Arctic has
   gone up from 15 cubic kilometres a year to close to 100," said Sharp. "As far
   as we can tell most of this is from surface melt, but we couldn't tell that
   from previous satellite surveys." The new satellite will provide the detailed
   measurements of ice sheets covering rough terrain, which Sharp says is
   especially important along the steep edges of ice sheets where the highest
   rate of melting occurs. To validate the satellite's coverage of ice sheets on
   land, members of Sharp's team will stand on Devon Island, located in Baffin
   Bay, Nunavut, and synchronize their watches with a survey aircraft fly-by and
   the CryoSat 2 satellite out on the edge of space. Readings from all three
   sources will be compared. "We're going to try and get as close to a real time
   as we can with all the measurements." Looking to the future of polar
   research, Sharp already has concerns about the continuity of satellite
   coverage when CryoSat's lifecycle comes to an end. "Do we keep putting
   satellites up or do we allow big gaps in our coverage of the Arctic," said
   Sharp. "Those are the key, high-level decisions that space agencies have to
   make."
    * Show More

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   37:24
   Exploring the Arctic from Space (17 Jan 2012)
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   EXPLORING THE ARCTIC FROM SPACE (17 JAN 2012)
   
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    * published: 19 Jan 2012
    * views: 5453
   
   Dr Katharine Giles (UCL Centre for Polar Observation & Modelling) The
   Arctic's supposed promise of abundant natural resources, shipping routes and
   scientific discoveries, has a long held fascination for those prepared to
   brave its harsh environment. With climate models predicting that the Polar
   Regions are the most sensitive to climate change, our need to understand them
   becomes increasingly important. The sub-zero temperatures and inhospitable
   icescapes faced by explorers also present problems to scientists collecting
   data. This lecture focuses on how satellites can help us understand the
   changing Arctic, and also comes back down to Earth to show UCL scientists
   stepping out onto the frozen ocean to validate the European Space Agency's
   CryoSat-2 satellite, which is designed to measure changes in the ice cover
   with unprecedented accuracy.
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   0:17
   #SpaceX #Falcon9 Deploys Arctic Broadband Satellites from Orbit 🚀 Successful
   #ASBM Deployment!
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   #SPACEX #FALCON9 DEPLOYS ARCTIC BROADBAND SATELLITES FROM ORBIT 🚀 SUCCESSFUL
   #ASBM DEPLOYMENT!
   
    * Report rights infringement
    * published: 12 Aug 2024
    * views: 2356
   
   Witness the stunning deployment of the Arctic Satellite Broadband Mission
   (ASBM) satellites as captured by the onboard camera on SpaceX’s Falcon 9
   rocket. Launched on August 11, 2024, this mission marks a critical step in
   providing military and commercial broadband communication to the northern
   polar regions. The ASBM-1 and ASBM-2 satellites were successfully released
   into a highly elliptical orbit, designed to offer 24/7 secure communication
   for U.S. forces and commercial users in the Arctic. This footage offers a
   rare, up-close look at the moment these crucial satellites were deployed from
   the second stage of the Falcon 9 rocket, continuing SpaceX's legacy of
   groundbreaking achievements in space exploration. CONNECT WITH ME HERE: Bio:
   https://overlookhorizon.com/bio Become a Member:
   https://youtube.com/OLHZN/join Twitter: https://twitter.com/OLHZN TikTok:
   https://tiktok.com/@olhzn Facebook: https://facebook.com/overlookhorizon
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   Website: https://overlookhorizon.com Jetstreams & Rocket Dreams Podcast:
   https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/olhzn
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   2:52
   Earth from Space: Gateway to the Arctic
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   EARTH FROM SPACE: GATEWAY TO THE ARCTIC
   
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    * published: 25 Jan 2013
    * views: 2795
   
   Earth from Space is presented by Kelsea Brennan-Wessels from the ESA Web-TV
   virtual studios. See where the first person to fly an aeroplane in the Arctic
   took off from on his pioneering flights in the fifty-first edition. Use the
   following link to view and download the full size image:
   http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Observing_the_Earth/Earth_from_Space_Gateway_to_the_Arctic
    * Show More

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   23:11
   Historic Space Missions & Implications
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   HISTORIC SPACE MISSIONS & IMPLICATIONS
   
    * Report rights infringement
    * published: 27 Aug 2024
    * views: 162
   
   민간인 우주 유영, 극지 탐사 등 역사적 우주 미션들 Good evening and thank you for joining us. I'm
   Han Da-eun in Seoul. The world is about to witness another significant
   milestone in the evolution of human space exploration. SpaceX’s daring space
   mission the ‘Polaris Dawn’ will send four astronauts into orbit aboard its
   Crew Dragon capsule for humanity’s first commercial spacewalk. And the
   mission will include a lot more than that, venturing into high Earth orbit
   and testing some 40 groundbreaking space experiments. SpaceX has also
   unveiled plans to fly in a polar orbit, a feat never before attempted with
   humans on board. Meanwhile, South Korea’s space endeavors are also making
   notable strides launching the mission of the country’s first surveillance
   satellite, and deploying AI processors into space. To delve deeper into these
   exciting developments, we’re joined by Park Si-soo, Seoul Bureau Chief of
   SpaceNews. Joining us from the U.S. is Wendy Whitman Cobb, Professor of
   Strategy and Security Studies at School of Advanced Air and Space Studies.
   (PARK) Q1. "Polaris Dawn" is expected to be a historic commercial spacewalk
   mission. First, tell us more about it. (WHITMAN COBB) Q2. The Polaris Dawn
   mission has been delayed again, and is now scheduled to lift off early
   Wednesday morning, local time. What caused the delay, and give us latest
   updates on the launch preparations. (WHITMAN COBB) Q3. Tell us about the
   significance of the ‘Polaris Dawn’ mission. How would the commercial
   spacewalk contribute to future space exploration, and what does reaching the
   highest Earth orbit ever achieved by humans mean to the space industry?
   (PARK) Q4. The Polaris Dawn mission will open a new chapter in private space
   flight. What are your prospects for SpaceX’s capabilities in future
   commercial space programs? (WHITMAN COBB) Q5. Meanwhile, what should’ve been
   a weeklong test flight for two NASA astronauts has now been extended to over
   eight months. NASA says it’s too risky to bring them back to Earth in
   Boeing’s troubled new capsule, and they’ll have to wait until next year for a
   ride home with SpaceX. What’s wrong with the Boeing capsule, and why do they
   have to wait for so long for their next ride home? (PARK) Q6. Back here at
   home, South Korea has signed a contract with SpaceX to launch a multipurpose
   communications satellite, ‘Cheollian 3’ to geostationary orbit in the second
   half of 2027. Give us more details on this. +Also tell us a bit about South
   Korea’s expanding partnership with SpaceX. (WHITMAN COBB) Q7. Another
   historic mission under preparation by SpaceX– it has unveiled a polar orbit
   mission backed by crypto magnate Chun Wang. Can you elaborate on this mission
   and share your outlook on its prospects? (PARK) Q8. South Korea's first
   reconnaissance satellite launched at the end of last year, has been certified
   as ‘combat fit'. What mission would it focus on from now on, and also give us
   the latest updates on the second surveillance satellite launched in April?
   (PARK) Q9. Korea’s satellite startup TelePIX has announced that it sent its
   high-performance artificial intelligence processor for satellites into space.
   The processor, called TetraPLEX, will help in transmitting large amounts of
   data to ground stations for processing. Give us more details on this, and
   your thoughts on the role of AI in the space industry. And that brings us to
   the end of this show. Thank you for watching, and be sure to tune in same
   time tomorrow to join our conversation. Good bye for now. #UnitedStates
   #Space #Spacewalk #Polaris_Dawn #SpaceX #우주 #우주_유영 #스페이스X #폴라리스던
   #Arirang_News #아리랑뉴스 📣 Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/arirangtvnews 📣
   Twitter : https://twitter.com/arirangtvnews 📣 Homepage :
   https://v2.arirang.com/ 2024-08-27, 18:30 (KST)
    * Show More

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   0:16
   Arctic: The Land of Midnight Sun | #multifront #shorts
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   ARCTIC: THE LAND OF MIDNIGHT SUN | #MULTIFRONT #SHORTS
   
    * Report rights infringement
    * published: 24 Aug 2022
    * views: 327790
   
   Arctic: The Land of Midnight Sun #multifront #shorts #norway #trending
   #current #northpole
    * Show More

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PLAYLIST TIME: 0:00 / 2:34:12


SCIENCE UNCUT: "ARCTIC ON THE EDGE?"

 * Report rights infringement
 * published: 05 Feb 2013
 * views: 4229

NASA's Tom Wagner hosts an informal discussion with ice scientists about the
major changes seen in the Arctic during 2012 -- shrinking sea ice, melting of
the Greenland ice sheet, and more. The program highlights the contributions NASA
Earth science research and satellites are making to understanding this dynamic
region and predicted what the future holds for the Arctic in a changing climate.
 * Show More


24:46
Sci­ence Uncut: "Arc­tic on the Edge?"
NASA's Tom Wag­n­er hosts an in­for­mal dis­cus­sion with ice sci­en­tists about
the major changes...
pub­lished: 05 Feb 2013
Play in Full Screen
Sci­ence Uncut: "Arc­tic on the Edge?"


SCI­ENCE UNCUT: "ARC­TIC ON THE EDGE?"

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 05 Feb 2013
 * views: 4229

NASA's Tom Wag­n­er hosts an in­for­mal dis­cus­sion with ice sci­en­tists about
the major changes seen in the Arc­tic dur­ing 2012 -- shrink­ing sea ice,
melt­ing of the Green­land ice sheet, and more. The pro­gram high­lights the
con­tri­bu­tions NASA Earth sci­ence re­search and satel­lites are mak­ing to
un­der­stand­ing this dy­nam­ic re­gion and pre­dict­ed what the fu­ture holds
for the Arc­tic in a chang­ing cli­mate.
 * Show More

3:32
NASA | A Se­lec­tive His­to­ry of Arc­tic Sea Ice Ob­ser­va­tions, Part 2
*Up­dat­ed: 09/08/14* The study of Arc­tic sea ice changed for­ev­er with the
dawn of the Spac...
pub­lished: 08 Sep 2014
Play in Full Screen
NASA | A Se­lec­tive His­to­ry of Arc­tic Sea Ice Ob­ser­va­tions, Part 2


NASA | A SE­LEC­TIVE HIS­TO­RY OF ARC­TIC SEA ICE OB­SER­VA­TIONS, PART 2

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 08 Sep 2014
 * views: 15465

*Up­dat­ed: 09/08/14* The study of Arc­tic sea ice changed for­ev­er with the
dawn of the Space Age and the first Earth-ob­serv­ing satel­lites. Part 2 of our
an­i­mat­ed time­line picks up where Part 1 left off — with the launch of the
TIROS weath­er satel­lite. This video is pub­lic do­main and can be down­load­ed
at: http:// svs. gsfc. nasa. gov/ goto? 11634 Like our videos? Sub­scribe to
NASA's God­dard Shorts HD pod­cast: http:// svs. gsfc. nasa. gov/ vis/ iTunes/
f0004_ index. html Or find NASA God­dard Space Flight Cen­ter on Face­book:
http:// www. facebook. com/ NASA. GSFC Or find us on Twit­ter: http:// twitter.
com/ NASAGoddard
 * Show More

53:28
Arc­tic Sink­holes I Full Doc­u­men­tary I NOVA I PBS
In the Arc­tic, enor­mous re­leas­es of methane, a po­tent green­house gas,
threat­en the cli­mate...
pub­lished: 03 Feb 2022
Play in Full Screen
Arc­tic Sink­holes I Full Doc­u­men­tary I NOVA I PBS


ARC­TIC SINK­HOLES I FULL DOC­U­MEN­TARY I NOVA I PBS

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 03 Feb 2022
 * views: 14050821

In the Arc­tic, enor­mous re­leas­es of methane, a po­tent green­house gas,
threat­en the cli­mate. Colos­sal ex­plo­sions shake a re­mote cor­ner of the
Siberi­an tun­dra, leav­ing be­hind mas­sive sink­holes. In Alas­ka, a huge lake
erupts with bub­bles of in­flammable gas. Sci­en­tists are dis­cov­er­ing that
these mys­ti­fy­ing phe­nom­e­na add up to a tick­ing time bomb, as long-frozen
per­mafrost melts and re­leas­es vast amounts of methane, a po­tent green­house
gas. What are the im­pli­ca­tions of these dra­mat­ic de­vel­op­ments in the
Arc­tic? Sci­en­tists and local com­mu­ni­ties alike are strug­gling to grasp
the scale of the methane threat and what it means for our cli­mate fu­ture.
Of­fi­cial Web­site: https:// to. pbs. org/ 3AOUzLz Chap­ters 00:00
In­tro­duc­tion 02:22 Giant Sink­hole in Siberia 05:54 Ev­i­dence of Methane in
Sink­holes 09:02 Alaskan Lake Bub­bling 14:47 Ef­fects of Per­mafrost Thaw on
Cli­mate 17:26 Na­tive Alaskan So­lu­tions to Per­mafrost 21:37 Or­gan­ic
Mat­ter Im­pact­ed by Per­mafrost 24:44 Green­house Gasses Emit­ted from
Per­mafrost Thaw 33:37 Fos­sil Methane in Earth’s Crust 42:19 Arc­tic Re­gions
are Sink­ing 47:47 How Com­mu­ni­ties are Find­ing So­lu­tions to Per­mafrost
Melt­ing 50:15 Con­clu­sion (Pre­miered Wednes­day, Febru­ary 2 at 9PM ET on
PBS.) © 2022 WGBH Ed­u­ca­tion­al Foun­da­tion All rights re­served This
pro­gram was pro­duced by GBH, which is sole­ly re­spon­si­ble for its con­tent.
Some fun­ders of NOVA also fund basic sci­ence re­search. Ex­perts fea­tured in
this film may have re­ceived sup­port from fun­ders of this pro­gram. Fund­ing
for NOVA is pro­vid­ed by Brilliant. org, the David H. Koch Fund for Sci­ence,
the NOVA Sci­ence Trust, the Cor­po­ra­tion for Pub­lic Broad­cast­ing, and PBS
view­ers. This pro­gram is made pos­si­ble by view­ers like you. Sup­port your
local PBS sta­tion here: https:// pbs. org/ donate/ Enjoy full episodes of your
fa­vorite PBS shows any­time, any­where with the free PBS Video app: https://
to. pbs. org/ 2QbtzhR Stay up to date on the lat­est sci­ence dis­cov­er­ies,
full episodes, ar­ti­cles, videos, and more by sign­ing up for NOVA's
newslet­ter here: https:// www. pbs. org/ wgbh/ nova/ newsletter/ FOL­LOW US:
NOVA YouTube: https:// www. youtube. com/ novaonline Face­book: https:// www.
facebook. com/ NOVApbs Twit­ter: https:// twitter. com/ novapbs In­sta­gram:
https:// www. instagram. com/ novapbs/ PBS Face­book: https:// www. facebook.
com/ PBS/ Twit­ter: https:// twitter. com/ PBS/ In­sta­gram: https:// www.
instagram. com/ PBS/ Shop: https:// shop. pbs. org/ sink­hole open­ing up,
per­mafrost dis­cov­er­ies, sink­hole caught on tape, sink­hole full movie,
sink­hole doc­men­tary, sink­hole com­pi­la­tion, what is a sink­hole, sink­hole
swal­lows, what is per­mafrost, siberi­an per­mafrost, per­mafrost melt­ing
#sink­hole #doc­u­men­tary #per­mafrost #no­vapbs #cli­mat­e­change #methane
#green­house­gas­es
 * Show More

8:06
ARC­TIC: Space Pro­jects for the Arc­tic & more – 20th Aug 2024
Arc­tic space ex­plo­ration, Nor­way's plas­tic con­tam­i­na­tion, Ice­land's
de­vel­op­ment of its fir...
pub­lished: 21 Aug 2024
Play in Full Screen
ARC­TIC: Space Pro­jects for the Arc­tic & more – 20th Aug 2024


ARC­TIC: SPACE PRO­JECTS FOR THE ARC­TIC & MORE – 20TH AUG 2024

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 21 Aug 2024
 * views: 7

Arc­tic space ex­plo­ration, Nor­way's plas­tic con­tam­i­na­tion, Ice­land's
de­vel­op­ment of its first wind farm, mer­cury pol­lu­tion, Alas­ka's trou­bled
fish­ing in­dus­try, and much more!  Thanks for tun­ing in! Let us know what you
think and what we can im­prove on by email­ing us at info@ rorshok. com  Like
what you hear? Sub­scribe, share, and tell your buds. The Ror­shok Ocean
Up­date: https:// rorshok-ocean-update. captivate. fm Ice­land: En­er­gy
Coun­try Pro­file: https:// ourworldindata. org/ energy/ country/ iceland   We
want to get to know you! Please fill in this mini sur­vey: https:// forms. gle/
NV3h5jN13cRDp2r66  Wanna avoid ads and help us fi­nan­cial­ly? Fol­low the link:
https:// bit. ly/ rorshok-donate
 * Show More

0:20
Satel­lite takes a space-eye view of Arc­tic ice
CryoSat 2 flyby over Green­land (Ed­mon­ton) More than 700 kilo­me­tres above
Earth, a recen...
pub­lished: 29 Apr 2010
Play in Full Screen
Satel­lite takes a space-eye view of Arc­tic ice


SATEL­LITE TAKES A SPACE-EYE VIEW OF ARC­TIC ICE

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 29 Apr 2010
 * views: 3441

CryoSat 2 flyby over Green­land (Ed­mon­ton) More than 700 kilo­me­tres above
Earth, a re­cent­ly launched satel­lite is being read­ied to pro­vide
Uni­ver­si­ty of Al­ber­ta re­searchers with a new set of eyes for mon­i­tor­ing
ice thick­ness across the Arc­tic. Mar­tin Sharp and Chris­tian Haas,
re­searchers in the U of A's De­part­ment of Earth and At­mo­spher­ic Sci­ences,
will play lead roles mak­ing sure CryoSat 2, launched ear­li­er this month by
the Eu­ro­pean Space Agen­cy, pro­vides ac­cu­rate read­ings. Haas will com­pare
CryoSat's cal­cu­la­tions of sea-ice vol­ume with data he's col­lect­ed with
elec­tron­ic mon­i­tor­ing equip­ment over the years on nu­mer­ous low
al­ti­tude flights. Last spring, Haas zigzagged his way across the Arc­tic, just
60 me­tres above the sea ice, cov­er­ing the vast area be­tween Green­land and
Alas­ka. Haas will up­date his own re­search next month with a se­ries of
he­li­copter flights over the ice. Haas says Cryosat 2's read­ings will be
val­i­dat­ed over the next six months and ex­pects that its re­sults will go
on­line this fall. "The satel­lite will pro­vide up­dat­ed Arc­tic-wide data
once every month," said Haas. "The satel­lite will com­pli­ment the re­search
that I and oth­ers will con­tin­ue with and the re­sult will be a total pic­ture
of sea­son­al vari­a­tions of the ice." Haas ex­plains this or­bit­ing
tech­nol­o­gy has a dis­tinct ad­van­tage over Arc­tic re­search done on foot or
from low fly­ing air­craft, be­cause it's weath­er proof. "CryoSat uses radar
teleme­try which can see through any kind of weath­er and cloud cover," said
Haas. CryoSat 2 isn't the first satel­lite to mea­sure ice thick­ness at both
poles. Last fall, an Amer­i­can satel­lite called ICE­SAT sud­den­ly stopped
work­ing after near­ly six years in orbit. In 2005, the Eu­ro­pean Space Agen­cy
launched CryoSat 1, but that mis­sion ended badly with a launch fail­ure a
cou­ple of min­utes after blast off. Haas says things are so far, so good, with
this Eu­ro­pean Space Agen­cy mis­sion. The life ex­pectan­cy of CryoSat 2 is
three to five years. While Haas fo­cus­es his work on sea ice, Sharp will work
to val­i­date the satel­lite's read­ing of land-based ice sheets. Sharp says
that while pre­vi­ous radar teleme­try sur­veys of Arc­tic land mass­es fo­cused
on large land forms like Green­land, CryoSat 2 will in­clude data from small­er
ice for­ma­tions cov­er­ing is­lands in the Cana­di­an Arc­tic. "We have
ev­i­dence that in the last decade the ice-mass loss in the Cana­di­an Arc­tic
has gone up from 15 cubic kilo­me­tres a year to close to 100," said Sharp. "As
far as we can tell most of this is from sur­face melt, but we couldn't tell that
from pre­vi­ous satel­lite sur­veys." The new satel­lite will pro­vide the
de­tailed mea­sure­ments of ice sheets cov­er­ing rough ter­rain, which Sharp
says is es­pe­cial­ly im­por­tant along the steep edges of ice sheets where the
high­est rate of melt­ing oc­curs. To val­i­date the satel­lite's cov­er­age of
ice sheets on land, mem­bers of Sharp's team will stand on Devon Is­land,
lo­cat­ed in Baf­fin Bay, Nunavut, and syn­chro­nize their watch­es with a
sur­vey air­craft fly-by and the CryoSat 2 satel­lite out on the edge of space.
Read­ings from all three sources will be com­pared. "We're going to try and get
as close to a real time as we can with all the mea­sure­ments." Look­ing to the
fu­ture of polar re­search, Sharp al­ready has con­cerns about the con­ti­nu­ity
of satel­lite cov­er­age when CryoSat's life­cy­cle comes to an end. "Do we keep
putting satel­lites up or do we allow big gaps in our cov­er­age of the
Arc­tic," said Sharp. "Those are the key, high-lev­el de­ci­sions that space
agen­cies have to make."
 * Show More

37:24
Ex­plor­ing the Arc­tic from Space (17 Jan 2012)
Dr Katharine Giles (UCL Cen­tre for Polar Ob­ser­va­tion & Mod­elling) The
Arc­tic's sup­posed...
pub­lished: 19 Jan 2012
Play in Full Screen
Ex­plor­ing the Arc­tic from Space (17 Jan 2012)


EX­PLOR­ING THE ARC­TIC FROM SPACE (17 JAN 2012)

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 19 Jan 2012
 * views: 5453

Dr Katharine Giles (UCL Cen­tre for Polar Ob­ser­va­tion & Mod­elling) The
Arc­tic's sup­posed promise of abun­dant nat­u­ral re­sources, ship­ping routes
and sci­en­tif­ic dis­cov­er­ies, has a long held fas­ci­na­tion for those
pre­pared to brave its harsh en­vi­ron­ment. With cli­mate mod­els pre­dict­ing
that the Polar Re­gions are the most sen­si­tive to cli­mate change, our need to
un­der­stand them be­comes in­creas­ing­ly im­por­tant. The sub-ze­ro
tem­per­a­tures and in­hos­pitable icescapes faced by ex­plor­ers also pre­sent
prob­lems to sci­en­tists col­lect­ing data. This lec­ture fo­cus­es on how
satel­lites can help us un­der­stand the chang­ing Arc­tic, and also comes back
down to Earth to show UCL sci­en­tists step­ping out onto the frozen ocean to
val­i­date the Eu­ro­pean Space Agen­cy's CryoSat-2 satel­lite, which is
de­signed to mea­sure changes in the ice cover with un­prece­dent­ed
ac­cu­ra­cy.
 * Show More

0:17
#SpaceX #Fal­con9 De­ploys Arc­tic Broad­band Satel­lites from Orbit 🚀
Suc­cess­ful #ASBM De­ploy­ment!
Wit­ness the stun­ning de­ploy­ment of the Arc­tic Satel­lite Broad­band
Mis­sion (ASBM) satel­lite...
pub­lished: 12 Aug 2024
Play in Full Screen
#SpaceX #Fal­con9 De­ploys Arc­tic Broad­band Satel­lites from Orbit 🚀
Suc­cess­ful #ASBM De­ploy­ment!


#SPACEX #FAL­CON9 DE­PLOYS ARC­TIC BROAD­BAND SATEL­LITES FROM ORBIT 🚀
SUC­CESS­FUL #ASBM DE­PLOY­MENT!

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 12 Aug 2024
 * views: 2356

Wit­ness the stun­ning de­ploy­ment of the Arc­tic Satel­lite Broad­band
Mis­sion (ASBM) satel­lites as cap­tured by the on­board cam­era on SpaceX’s
Fal­con 9 rock­et. Launched on Au­gust 11, 2024, this mis­sion marks a
crit­i­cal step in pro­vid­ing mil­i­tary and com­mer­cial broad­band
com­mu­ni­ca­tion to the north­ern polar re­gions. The AS­BM-1 and AS­BM-2
satel­lites were suc­cess­ful­ly re­leased into a high­ly el­lip­ti­cal orbit,
de­signed to offer 24/7 se­cure com­mu­ni­ca­tion for U.S. forces and
com­mer­cial users in the Arc­tic. This footage of­fers a rare, up-close look at
the mo­ment these cru­cial satel­lites were de­ployed from the sec­ond stage of
the Fal­con 9 rock­et, con­tin­u­ing SpaceX's lega­cy of ground­break­ing
achieve­ments in space ex­plo­ration. CON­NECT WITH ME HERE: Bio: https://
overlookhorizon. com/ bio Be­come a Mem­ber: https:// youtube. com/ OLHZN/ join
Twit­ter: https:// twitter. com/ OLHZN Tik­Tok: https:// tiktok. com/@ olhzn
Face­book: https:// facebook. com/ overlookhorizon Pa­tre­on: https:// patreon.
com/ overlookhorizon Dis­cord: https:// discord. gg/ vxnAf4T LinkedIn: https://
linkedin. com/ company/ olhzn In­sta­gram: https:// instagram. com/ olhzn
Twitch: https:// twitch. tv/ olhzn Web­site: https:// overlookhorizon. com
Jet­streams & Rock­et Dreams Pod­cast: https:// podcasters. spotify. com/ pod/
show/ olhzn
 * Show More

2:52
Earth from Space: Gate­way to the Arc­tic
Earth from Space is pre­sent­ed by Kelsea Bren­nan-Wes­sels from the ESA Web-TV
vir­tu­al stu­dio...
pub­lished: 25 Jan 2013
Play in Full Screen
Earth from Space: Gate­way to the Arc­tic


EARTH FROM SPACE: GATE­WAY TO THE ARC­TIC

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 25 Jan 2013
 * views: 2795

Earth from Space is pre­sent­ed by Kelsea Bren­nan-Wes­sels from the ESA Web-TV
vir­tu­al stu­dios. See where the first per­son to fly an aero­plane in the
Arc­tic took off from on his pi­o­neer­ing flights in the fifty-first edi­tion.
Use the fol­low­ing link to view and down­load the full size image: http:// www.
esa. int/ Our_ Activities/ Observing_ the_ Earth/ Earth_ from_ Space_ Gateway_
to_ the_ Arctic
 * Show More

23:11
His­toric Space Mis­sions & Im­pli­ca­tions
민간인 우주 유영, 극지 탐사 등 역사적 우주 미션들 Good evening and thank you for join­ing us. I'm
Han Da-eun i...
pub­lished: 27 Aug 2024
Play in Full Screen
His­toric Space Mis­sions & Im­pli­ca­tions


HIS­TORIC SPACE MIS­SIONS & IM­PLI­CA­TIONS

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 27 Aug 2024
 * views: 162

민간인 우주 유영, 극지 탐사 등 역사적 우주 미션들 Good evening and thank you for join­ing us. I'm
Han Da-eun in Seoul. The world is about to wit­ness an­oth­er sig­nif­i­cant
mile­stone in the evo­lu­tion of human space ex­plo­ration. SpaceX’s dar­ing
space mis­sion the ‘Po­laris Dawn’ will send four as­tro­nauts into orbit aboard
its Crew Drag­on cap­sule for hu­man­i­ty’s first com­mer­cial space­walk. And
the mis­sion will in­clude a lot more than that, ven­tur­ing into high Earth
orbit and test­ing some 40 ground­break­ing space ex­per­i­ments. SpaceX has
also un­veiled plans to fly in a polar orbit, a feat never be­fore at­tempt­ed
with hu­mans on board. Mean­while, South Korea’s space en­deav­ors are also
mak­ing no­table strides launch­ing the mis­sion of the coun­try’s first
surveil­lance satel­lite, and de­ploy­ing AI pro­ces­sors into space. To delve
deep­er into these ex­cit­ing de­vel­op­ments, we’re joined by Park Si-soo,
Seoul Bu­reau Chief of Space­News. Join­ing us from the U.S. is Wendy Whit­man
Cobb, Pro­fes­sor of Strat­e­gy and Se­cu­ri­ty Stud­ies at School of Ad­vanced
Air and Space Stud­ies. (PARK) Q1. "Po­laris Dawn" is ex­pect­ed to be a
his­toric com­mer­cial space­walk mis­sion. First, tell us more about it.
(WHIT­MAN COBB) Q2. The Po­laris Dawn mis­sion has been de­layed again, and is
now sched­uled to lift off early Wednes­day morn­ing, local time. What caused
the delay, and give us lat­est up­dates on the launch prepa­ra­tions. (WHIT­MAN
COBB) Q3. Tell us about the sig­nif­i­cance of the ‘Po­laris Dawn’ mis­sion. How
would the com­mer­cial space­walk con­tribute to fu­ture space ex­plo­ration,
and what does reach­ing the high­est Earth orbit ever achieved by hu­mans mean
to the space in­dus­try? (PARK) Q4. The Po­laris Dawn mis­sion will open a new
chap­ter in pri­vate space flight. What are your prospects for SpaceX’s
ca­pa­bil­i­ties in fu­ture com­mer­cial space pro­grams? (WHIT­MAN COBB) Q5.
Mean­while, what should’ve been a week­long test flight for two NASA
as­tro­nauts has now been ex­tend­ed to over eight months. NASA says it’s too
risky to bring them back to Earth in Boe­ing’s trou­bled new cap­sule, and
they’ll have to wait until next year for a ride home with SpaceX. What’s wrong
with the Boe­ing cap­sule, and why do they have to wait for so long for their
next ride home? (PARK) Q6. Back here at home, South Korea has signed a con­tract
with SpaceX to launch a mul­ti­pur­pose com­mu­ni­ca­tions satel­lite,
‘Che­ol­lian 3’ to geo­sta­tion­ary orbit in the sec­ond half of 2027. Give us
more de­tails on this. +Also tell us a bit about South Korea’s ex­pand­ing
part­ner­ship with SpaceX. (WHIT­MAN COBB) Q7. An­oth­er his­toric mis­sion
under prepa­ra­tion by SpaceX– it has un­veiled a polar orbit mis­sion backed by
cryp­to mag­nate Chun Wang. Can you elab­o­rate on this mis­sion and share your
out­look on its prospects? (PARK) Q8. South Korea's first re­con­nais­sance
satel­lite launched at the end of last year, has been cer­ti­fied as ‘com­bat
fit'. What mis­sion would it focus on from now on, and also give us the lat­est
up­dates on the sec­ond surveil­lance satel­lite launched in April? (PARK) Q9.
Korea’s satel­lite start­up TelePIX has an­nounced that it sent its
high-per­for­mance ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence pro­ces­sor for satel­lites
into space. The pro­ces­sor, called TetraPLEX, will help in trans­mit­ting large
amounts of data to ground sta­tions for pro­cess­ing. Give us more de­tails on
this, and your thoughts on the role of AI in the space in­dus­try. And that
brings us to the end of this show. Thank you for watch­ing, and be sure to tune
in same time to­mor­row to join our con­ver­sa­tion. Good bye for now.
#Unit­ed­States #Space #Space­walk #Po­laris_­Dawn #SpaceX #우주 #우주_유영 #스페이스X
#폴라리스던 #Ari­rang_News #아리랑뉴스 📣 Face­book : https:// www. facebook. com/
arirangtvnews 📣 Twit­ter : https:// twitter. com/ arirangtvnews 📣 Home­page :
https:// v2. arirang. com/ 2024-08-27, 18:30 (KST)
 * Show More

0:16
Arc­tic: The Land of Mid­night Sun | #mul­ti­front #shorts
Arc­tic: The Land of Mid­night Sun #mul­ti­front #shorts #nor­way #trend­ing
#cur­rent #northp...
pub­lished: 24 Aug 2022
Play in Full Screen
Arc­tic: The Land of Mid­night Sun | #mul­ti­front #shorts


ARC­TIC: THE LAND OF MID­NIGHT SUN | #MUL­TI­FRONT #SHORTS

 * Re­port rights in­fringe­ment
 * pub­lished: 24 Aug 2022
 * views: 327790

Arc­tic: The Land of Mid­night Sun #mul­ti­front #shorts #nor­way #trend­ing
#cur­rent #north­pole
 * Show More


SPACE EXPLORATION

Space exploration is the ongoing discovery and exploration of celestial
structures in outer space by means of continuously evolving and growing space
technology. While the study of space is carried out mainly by astronomers with
telescopes, the physical exploration of space is conducted both by unmanned
robotic probes and human spaceflight.

While the observation of objects in space, known as astronomy, predates reliable
recorded history, it was the development of large and relatively efficient
rockets during the early 20th century that allowed physical space exploration to
become a reality. Common rationales for exploring space include advancing
scientific research, national prestige, uniting different nations, ensuring the
future survival of humanity, and developing military and strategic advantages
against other countries.

Space exploration has often been used as a proxy competition for geopolitical
rivalries such as the Cold War. The early era of space exploration was driven by
a "Space Race" between the Soviet Union and the United States. The launch of the
first human-made object to orbit Earth, the Soviet Union's Sputnik 1, on 4
October 1957, and the first Moon landing by the American Apollo 11 mission on 20
July 1969 are often taken as landmarks for this initial period. The Soviet space
program achieved many of the first milestones, including the first living being
in orbit in 1957, the first human spaceflight (Yuri Gagarin aboard Vostok 1) in
1961, the first spacewalk (by Aleksei Leonov) on 18 March 1965, the first
automatic landing on another celestial body in 1966, and the launch of the first
space station (Salyut 1) in 1971.

Read more
This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia -
https://wn.com/Space_exploration

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SCIENCE UNCUT: "ARCTIC ON THE EDGE?"...


NASA | A SELECTIVE HISTORY OF ARCTIC SEA ICE OBSER...


ARCTIC SINKHOLES I FULL DOCUMENTARY I NOVA I PBS...


ARCTIC: SPACE PROJECTS FOR THE ARCTIC & MORE – 20T...


SATELLITE TAKES A SPACE-EYE VIEW OF ARCTIC ICE...


EXPLORING THE ARCTIC FROM SPACE (17 JAN 2012)...


#SPACEX #FALCON9 DEPLOYS ARCTIC BROADBAND SATELLIT...


EARTH FROM SPACE: GATEWAY TO THE ARCTIC...


HISTORIC SPACE MISSIONS & IMPLICATIONS...


ARCTIC: THE LAND OF MIDNIGHT SUN | #MULTIFRONT #S...


LATEST NEWS FOR: ARCTIC SPACE EXPLORATION

Edit


ELON MUSK AND SPACEX ANNOUNCED THE FIRST MANNED SPACE MISSION INTO EARTH'S POLAR
ORBIT

 * 
 * 

The Cleveland American 19 Aug 2024
Crew Dragon Frame 2, the vessel carrying out this mission, It is named after the
boat used by explorers to reach the Arctic and Antarctic regions for the first
time. The company has been a pioneer in reducing costs in space exploration.
Edit


INDIA'S MODI TELLS PUTIN THAT 'HEART BLEEDS' OVER DEATHS OF CHILDREN IN WAR

 * 
 * 

Korea Times 10 Jul 2024
In joint statements, they further outlined plans for closer cooperation in
developing the Northern Sea Route through Arctic waters and for working together
in space exploration, among other areas.
Edit


INDIA PM TELLS PUTIN DEATHS OF CHILDREN IN WAR ‘TERRIFYING’

 * 
 * 

Gulf-Times 09 Jul 2024
The two countries said they were also exploring an increase in Russian coal
sales to India.In joint statements, they further outlined plans for closer
co-operation in developing the Northern Sea Route ...
Edit


MODI SLAMS PUTIN OVER WAR, SAYS HIS 'HEART BLEEDS' FOR CHILDREN DYING IN UKRAINE

 * 
 * 

The News International 09 Jul 2024
In joint statements, they further outlined plans for closer cooperation in
developing the Northern Sea Route through Arctic waters and for working together
in space exploration, among other areas.Special partnership.
Edit


HOW CANADA’S LIBERAL PARTY WAS INFILTRATED BY MISANTHROPIC TECHNOCRATS. MATTHEW
EHRET

 * 
 * 

GlobalResearch 02 Mar 2024
... society such as building the Bering Strait tunnel joining the Polar Silk
Road, launching Arctic development and pushing for high intensity investments
into fission, fusion power and space exploration.
Edit


BELOVED ARCTIC PUP CHARACTER MARSHMELLO HAS HITCHED A RIDE ON A SPACE X FALCON 9
...

 * 
 * 

The Huntsville Item 27 Feb 2024
This groundbreaking project marks a significant milestone in the intersection of
art, technology, and space exploration, catapulting a piece of digital art
linked to the adorable Earth-based Arctic pet, Marshmello, into lunar history.
Edit


CRUDE REALITY: WHY HAS INDIA RAMPED UP IMPORTS OF RUSSIAN OIL

 * 
 * 

Beijing News 24 Jan 2024
Continuation ... Expansion ... India could also leverage its oil trade with
Russia to enhance its cooperation in other areas, such as defense, nuclear,
space, and technology, and to explore new opportunities in the Russian Far East
and the Arctic regions.
Edit


CRUDE REALITY: WHY HAS INDIA RAMPED UP IMPORTS OF RUSSIAN OIL?

 * 
 * 

Russia Today 24 Jan 2024
Continuation ... Expansion ... India could also leverage its oil trade with
Russia to enhance its cooperation in other areas, such as defense, nuclear,
space, and technology, and to explore new opportunities in the Russian Far East
and the Arctic regions ... .
photo: AP / Russian Presidential Press Office
Edit


CHINA’S XI JINPING HAILS RUSSIA COOPERATION AS RECORD TRADE BEATS $200 BILLION
TARGET

 * 
 * 

CNN 21 Dec 2023
Edit


INDIA’S 1ST ARCTIC WINTER EXPEDITION: ‘RESEARCH STATION HIMADRI NOW EQUIPPED TO
SUPPORT OPERATIONS DURING POLAR NIGHTS’

 * 
 * 

Financial Express 18 Dec 2023
While the Antarctic is harsher and more remote for exploration, the Arctic is
challenging mainly because of the limited space for independent studies ...
Whereas, the Arctic has limited space for ...
Edit


INDIA\U2019S 1ST ARCTIC WINTER EXPEDITION: \U2018RESEARCH STATION HIMADRI NOW
EQUIPPED TO SUPPORT OPERATIONS DURING POLAR NIGHTS\U2019

 * 
 * 

Indian Express 18 Dec 2023
While the Antarctic is harsher and more remote for exploration, the Arctic is
challenging mainly because of the limited space for independent studies ...
Whereas, the Arctic has limited space for ...
Edit


INSIDE THE SMALL WORLD OF SIMULATING OTHER WORLDS

 * 
 * 

Popular Science 30 Sep 2023
In 2000, the nonprofit Mars Society, a space-exploration advocacy and research
organization, built the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station in Nunavut,
Canada, and soon after constructed the Mars Desert Research Station in Utah.
Edit


‘I FEEL LIKE A MAN FROM ANOTHER ERA’: NEANDERTHAL HUNTER LUDOVIC SLIMAK

 * 
 * 

The Observer 10 Sep 2023
His Neanderthal hunting has seen him direct digs everywhere from the Horn of
Africa to the Arctic Circle ... “On this planet now, there is no longer any
exploring to do horizontally in space, but there’s so much to do in time.
Edit


MARS COLONY COULD SURVIVE WITH 22 PEOPLE — JUST DON’T BRING THESE LOSERS

 * 
 * 

New York Post 24 Aug 2023
submarines, Arctic explorations, being onboard the International Space Station,
and even combat scenarios ... Those attune to tight and stressful environments
would be best to explore Mars, according to the research.via REUTERS.
Edit


SCIENTISTS REVEAL THE ONE TYPE OF PERSON WHO WOULDN’T LAST ON ANOTHER PLANET

 * 
 * 

Metro UK 24 Aug 2023
... limitations, and drew on research regarding high performing teams in
isolated and high stress environments such as in submarines, Arctic exploration,
aboard the International Space Station and at war.
 * 1
 * 2
 * Next page »


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