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Jefferson Beck



Movie   ID   Roles   Title
NASA's Wayne Esaias sees honeybees as important data collectors to help us understand our changing climate. <p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href=   10481 Narrator
Videographer
  Feeling the Sting of Climate Change
Reed is a materials assurance engineer who has a background in chemistry and has most recently worked on improving Hubble's outer blanket layer.   10474 Videographer
  Hubble Career Profiles
This animation shows  seasonal change in vegetation around the globe as measured by the NDVI value.   3584 Producer
  A Global View of Seasonal NDVI
Return to P.I.G.: The Long Wait for Science   10412 Editor
Producer
  Return to P.I.G.
In commemoration of the end of the International Polar Year, Tom Wagner, NASA Cryosphere Program Scientist, appeared on television stations around the country on April 6, 2009. This video highlights his answers to questions about the IPY, climate change, and new data on the extent and thickness of sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='2009_Sea_Ice_Findings_Cap_IPY_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10419 Producer
  New Sea Ice Findings Cap Year of Focus on Poles
This guided tour of the area surrounding McMurdo Station in Antarctica uses the Landsat Image Mosaic of Antarctica (LIMA). It's a great way to experience the frozen continent without any risk of frostbite.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='LIMA_wVO_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10416 Producer
  Guided Tour of LIMA Flyover
Nearly every spring since 1991, researchers including William Krabill of NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Va., have flown on a NASA aircraft over Greenland, collecting measurements of ice thickness from an altitude of about 2,000 feet. Now, on March 30, Krabill and colleagures return to collect updated measurements. This time, however, the mission is set to be more extensive than ever before, and takes place with new urgency. Radars and lasers new to the Greenland flights will be tested and calibrated with meaturements currently made from the Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat). Launched in January 2003, ICESat is already more than six years beyond its three-year design lifetime and should it come to an end, the NASA aircraft will be ready to bridge the gap until the launch of ICESat-II, planned for launch no earlier than 2014.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='GreenlandIceFlights_transcript.htm'>here</a>.   10414 Editor
Producer
Videographer
  Greenland Ice Flights
Side-by-side comparison   3586 Producer
  What Would have Happened to the Ozone Layer if Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) had not been Regulated?
The animation shows how, in the days leading up to March 14, 2008, pockets of rain fell between drought-ravaged areas that saw no rain, setting up boundaries of dry and moist air. These boundaries along with urban-rural land cover boundaries produce circulations and rising air similar to a sea breeze. They may also serve as localized regions of enhancement for existing storms or initiation of new storms. Modeling studies suggest that these boundaries may have been a factor in the storms that produced the Atlanta tornado.   10402 Producer
  Rain, Drought, Urbanization Contributing Factors for Storms
On September 13, 2008, NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center opened its gates to the public for Launchfest, a free open house celebrating a large number of upcoming launches.<p><p>(no transcript, audio is music-only)   10367 Videographer
  Launchfest: On the Goddard Mall
In October 2008, Goddard hosted The Discovery Channel's 'Young Scientist Challenge.' The challenge brought ten middle school student finalists from across the country to vie for the title of 'America's Top Young Scientist' and a chance to win a U.S. Savings Bond. Five teacher finalists contended for recognition as 'America's Top Science Teacher.' NASA scientists and educators helped design the activities, which both tested the communication skills of the students and celebrated 50 years of NASA space science.<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='dysc_transcript1.htm'>here</a>.   10343 Videographer
  Up to the Challenge
NASA's THEMIS mission has overturned a longstanding belief about the interaction between solar particles and Earth's protective magnetic field. This new discovery could help scientists predict when the solar storms that can disrupt power grids, satellites and even GPS signals, could be especially severe.<p>For more information: www.nasa.gov/themis<p><p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='THEMIS_script_12-11.htm'>here</a>.   10356 Videographer
  THEMIS Discovers Biggest Breach of Earth's Magnetosphere
Short video about the connection between NASA research and Icelandic puffins.   10339 Editor
Producer
Videographer
  The Puffin-Satellite Connection
The animation of Arctic sea ice from January 1 through September 14, 2008. The date is displayed in the upper right corner.   3556 Producer
  2008 Arctic Sea Ice from AMSR-E
The animation of Arctic sea ice from January 1 through September 12, identified by NSIDC as the minimum extent for 2008. This animation has a two second hold on September 12, 2008. The date is displayed in the upper left corner.   3561 Producer
  Close view of 2008 Arctic Sea Ice from AMSR-E
Arctic sea ice declined this summer to its second smallest extent in the satellite era, suggesting that the record set in 2007 may not have been an anomaly. If recent trends in the melt rate continue, we could see a virtually ice-free Arctic each summer much sooner than previously thought.<p><p>For complete transcript, click <a href='SeaIce2008_transcript.htm'>here</a>.<p>   10353 Editor
Narrator
Producer
Writer
  Sea Ice 2008


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