WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:01.401 --> 00:00:04.605 It’s only a matter of time before humans step foot on a new 2 00:00:04.605 --> 00:00:08.909 planetary body in our solar system. And with that in mind 3 00:00:08.909 --> 00:00:12.246 NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center is learning how to develop 4 00:00:12.246 --> 00:00:15.549 instruments that would be used by humans to conduct exploration 5 00:00:15.549 --> 00:00:18.852 and research. One research program actively involved in 6 00:00:18.852 --> 00:00:22.456 this pursuit sits in isolation in a habitat on the slopes of 7 00:00:22.456 --> 00:00:27.094 the Mauna Loa volcano in Hawai’i. It’s called HI-SEAS – 8 00:00:27.094 --> 00:00:30.597 and the Mars-like conditions and geology of the landscape allow 9 00:00:30.597 --> 00:00:34.134 the crews there to perform field tests and experiments that give 10 00:00:34.134 --> 00:00:38.338 a mission simulation an extra dose of realism. Today, 11 00:00:38.338 --> 00:00:42.042 scientists from NASA Goddard are nearby, deploying an instrument 12 00:00:42.042 --> 00:00:45.512 known as the mini-LHR, which measures methane and carbon 13 00:00:45.512 --> 00:00:49.416 dioxide in the atmosphere. The goal is to allow the HI-SEAS 14 00:00:49.416 --> 00:00:52.019 crew to simulate how an astronaut would interact with 15 00:00:52.019 --> 00:00:55.822 the instrument on another planet. The task is also 16 00:00:55.822 --> 00:00:58.692 designed to explore how NASA might approach an in-mission 17 00:00:58.692 --> 00:01:01.862 training with a new instrument that a crew has never seen 18 00:01:01.862 --> 00:01:06.166 before. This HI-SEAS adventure therefore has numerous 19 00:01:06.166 --> 00:01:09.770 components for NASA to monitor. And it all begins with the crew 20 00:01:09.770 --> 00:01:14.107 making the long trek over the old lava flows to the site of 21 00:01:14.107 --> 00:01:18.211 the mini-LHR. Once there, the team will get the instrument 22 00:01:18.211 --> 00:01:21.581 working so that it can start its actual data collection. On 23 00:01:21.581 --> 00:01:24.084 another planet, this atmospheric data would be important for 24 00:01:24.084 --> 00:01:29.656 understanding elements related to climate and habitability. The 25 00:01:29.656 --> 00:01:33.427 interaction between the HI-SEAS team and the mini-LHR is in 26 00:01:33.427 --> 00:01:36.697 itself a test – designed to monitor changes in the 27 00:01:36.697 --> 00:01:40.300 environment that are occurring naturally, or as a response to 28 00:01:40.300 --> 00:01:43.003 the human presence. By participating in this type of 29 00:01:43.003 --> 00:01:46.740 fieldwork study, NASA Goddard’s instrument field team is making 30 00:01:46.740 --> 00:01:50.277 great strides toward the larger mission of getting humans on the 31 00:01:50.277 --> 00:01:53.814 surface of another planet. And as the HI-SEAS crew can attest, 32 00:01:53.814 --> 00:01:58.819 doing so is no easy walk in the park. 33 00:02:04.124 --> 00:02:10.263 [beeping]