WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:01.070 --> 00:00:05.070 [Sound of electrical sparks, sizzle of burning cigarette] 2 00:00:05.070 --> 00:00:09.070 [Forest fire crackles, thunder echoes] 3 00:00:09.070 --> 00:00:13.070 [Sound of wildfire rises] Narrator: A wildfire is born … 4 00:00:13.070 --> 00:00:17.070 and teams of people leap into action, 5 00:00:17.070 --> 00:00:21.070 sounding the alarm for nearby residents, providing local fire observations, 6 00:00:21.070 --> 00:00:25.070 and getting ready to battle the flames from ground and sky. 7 00:00:25.070 --> 00:00:29.070 These front-line responders do the heavy lifting 8 00:00:29.070 --> 00:00:33.070 when it comes to fighting and managing fires, but they’re often 9 00:00:33.070 --> 00:00:37.070 helped by the view from higher up. [rythmic music builds] 10 00:00:37.070 --> 00:00:41.070 From late spring to early fall, two US Forest Service planes flying 11 00:00:41.070 --> 00:00:45.070 at 10,000 feet, crisscross the Western United States chasing fires. 12 00:00:45.070 --> 00:00:49.070 Sometimes mapping dozens of fires in one night, 13 00:00:49.070 --> 00:00:53.070 they help identify a fire’s perimeter 14 00:00:53.070 --> 00:00:57.070 and any outlying fires or hotspots, andprovide 15 00:00:57.070 --> 00:01:01.070 information to the Fire Management Teams on the ground. 16 00:01:01.070 --> 00:01:05.070 Meanwhile, further above, NASA and NOAA satellites 17 00:01:05.070 --> 00:01:09.070 provide a powerful global view of active fires across the entire planet. 18 00:01:09.070 --> 00:01:13.070 Satellites can fill in the gaps 19 00:01:13.070 --> 00:01:17.070 between ground and airborne observations, identifying fires 20 00:01:17.070 --> 00:01:21.070 soon after they start, and detecting fires 21 00:01:21.070 --> 00:01:25.070 that nothing else can – like in remote stretches of wilderness – 22 00:01:25.070 --> 00:01:29.000 – or estimating a fire’s perimeter when planes aren’t available. 23 00:01:29.000 --> 00:01:33.070 These fire observations from air and space [crackling of wildfire] 24 00:01:33.070 --> 00:01:37.070 can help responders decide where to send firefighters and other resources. 25 00:01:37.070 --> 00:01:41.070 File footage voiceover: Three, two, one 26 00:01:41.070 --> 00:01:45.000 Main engine start, and liftoff of the Atlas 27 00:01:45.000 --> 00:01:49.000 rocket with the Terra flagship of the Earth Observing System. 28 00:01:49.000 --> 00:01:53.070 Narrator: And since NASA designed and launched the first satellite instruments to specifically measure fires 29 00:01:53.070 --> 00:01:57.070 20 years ago. satellite fire data has also been used in many other ways. 30 00:01:57.070 --> 00:02:01.070 including detecting smoke plumes, forecasting and 31 00:02:01.070 --> 00:02:05.070 measuring air quality downwind from a fire, 32 00:02:05.070 --> 00:02:09.070 measuring burned area after fires are extinguished, and looking at trends 33 00:02:09.070 --> 00:02:13.070 in global fire frequency and severity. 34 00:02:13.070 --> 00:02:17.070 NASA and NOAA scientists are working to leverage that satellite data 35 00:02:17.070 --> 00:02:21.070 with new airborne field campaigns featuring new technologies 36 00:02:21.070 --> 00:02:25.070 for measuring wildfires, so that we can all make 37 00:02:25.070 --> 00:02:29.070 better decisions about how to respond when fire strikes. 38 00:02:29.070 --> 00:02:33.600 [music fades]