1 00:00:00,100 --> 00:00:00,800 Sounding rocket. 2 00:00:00,800 --> 00:00:04,833 Here at NASA, we're kind of known for launching things like sounding rockets. 3 00:00:05,366 --> 00:00:06,700 Sounding rockets are smaller, 4 00:00:06,700 --> 00:00:09,433 lower-cost options for launching science to the edge of space. 5 00:00:09,800 --> 00:00:13,000 Unlike larger rockets launching satellites or people, which can be hundreds of feet 6 00:00:13,000 --> 00:00:15,566 tall, sounding rockets are about 40 to 80 feet tall. 7 00:00:16,133 --> 00:00:18,300 Sounding rockets are also known as suborbital rockets. 8 00:00:18,433 --> 00:00:21,400 They launch on a parabolic trajectory, basically a big arch, 9 00:00:21,466 --> 00:00:23,833 reaching the top of Earth's atmosphere before coming back down. 10 00:00:24,133 --> 00:00:26,866 Sounding rocket flights last about 15 minutes. 11 00:00:26,866 --> 00:00:30,266 To break it down even further, “sounding” literally means to take a measurement. 12 00:00:30,666 --> 00:00:31,933 Because the flights are so short 13 00:00:31,933 --> 00:00:35,366 and the rockets are often reusable, sounding rockets offer a quick, low-cost 14 00:00:35,366 --> 00:00:37,200 way to take measurements of Earth's atmosphere, 15 00:00:37,200 --> 00:00:39,666 the Sun, X-rays in the universe, and so much more. 16 00:00:40,566 --> 00:00:41,166 At NASA, 17 00:00:41,166 --> 00:00:44,833 we've been launching sounding rockets since 1958, basically our very beginning. 18 00:00:45,266 --> 00:00:48,000 NASA's Wallops Flight Facility oversees our sounding rockets program. 19 00:00:48,300 --> 00:00:50,600 We've launched them at Wallops, as well as around the world, 20 00:00:50,733 --> 00:00:54,600 from Australia to Alaska, giving everyone from experienced researchers to students 21 00:00:54,600 --> 00:00:55,866 a chance to launch their science.