WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:06.450 NASA’s Aquarius instrument has returned its first global maps of soil moisture. 2 00:00:06.470 --> 00:00:06.720 3 00:00:06.740 --> 00:00:12.810 And these new maps reveal how the moisture in the soil responds to the changing seasons and weather phenomena. 4 00:00:12.830 --> 00:00:12.940 5 00:00:12.960 --> 00:00:20.280 The Aquarius instrument flies aboard the Aquarius/SAC-D satellite, which launched in June 2011. 6 00:00:20.300 --> 00:00:20.760 7 00:00:20.780 --> 00:00:29.860 This satellite was built by NASA and Argentina’s space agency, with a primary objective of measuring the salt concentration of the ocean surface. 8 00:00:29.880 --> 00:00:30.470 9 00:00:30.490 --> 00:00:36.700 Within the same year it was launched, the satellite produced its first global maps of sea surface salinity. 10 00:00:36.720 --> 00:00:37.670 11 00:00:37.690 --> 00:00:45.250 In addition to salinity, scientists also developed a method to use Aquarius to monitor moisture in the first two inches of soil. 12 00:00:45.270 --> 00:00:46.190 13 00:00:46.210 --> 00:00:50.880 Soil moisture is the water contained within the spaces of air between soil particles. 14 00:00:50.900 --> 00:00:51.400 15 00:00:51.420 --> 00:00:58.020 The amount of water in the soil can vary due to drought, floods, irrigation and changes in rainfall. 16 00:00:58.040 --> 00:00:58.630 17 00:00:58.650 --> 00:01:07.000 Soil moisture measurements have many uses, from improving weather forecasts and climate models to refining drought and flood predictions. 18 00:01:07.020 --> 00:01:07.290 19 00:01:07.310 --> 00:01:31.438 Observations made be Aquarius will be used to fine-tune soil moisture measurements made by NASA’s SMAP satellite, which is scheduled to launch later this year.