NOAA Satellite Operations 0:11 [Kathy] The nation runs on NOAA satellites 0:13 [Keith] Doing satellite operations is not as easy as just pushing a button on a keyboard. 0:19 [Al] We have a lot of data coming in; a lot of data going out…used a whole lot of different 0:23 ways throughout the world. 0:25 [Tom] This is a cast of thousands believe it or not. Here…this is the forefront; this 0:32 is the trenches. 0:33 [Keith] You hit that button; you send out of your database a command to the satellite, 0:39 but what you really don’t realize is that it traveled thousands of miles to your ground 0:43 station. It went as high as 20,000 miles up; went to the satellite; told the satellite 0:50 what to do. The satellite telemetry changed and then it would literally come back to you 0:56 in a blink of an eye. That chain of events requires a lot of time, a lot of distance, 1:01 a lot of people, a lot of resources. 1:03 [Al] Our data is national-critical data. 1:06 [Kathy] When you see a forecast that’s provided to you on television by your local forecaster 1:11 – all that originates from NOAA and the heart of that is our NOAA satellites. 1:15 [Mike] The satellite as it flies over the ground station…you usually have maybe 10 1:21 to 12 minutes where it’s going to be in view and then it’s going to pass out of 1:24 view. 1:24 [Keith] So in 12 minutes, you have to quickly ascertain the status of the satellite to see 1:30 if its health and safety is good; then start bringing down the data - recorded data - from 1:36 the orbit revolution. 1:37 [Mike] We have to go ahead and dump that to the ground station where it’s recorded on 1:42 the ground and then after the satellite leaves the station circle then we go ahead and post-ship, 1:48 bring all that data in actually in to the site here so that it can be distributed and 1:54 processed. 1:55 [Kathy] The U.S. military does take environmental data from our spacecraft to use in their forecasts 2:03 for tactical purposes. 2:04 [Keith] Its information about the weather. Its information about the soil density content. 2:10 It just allows them to be able to make decisions real-time that they have in the field that 2:15 they can’t get any other way quickly. 2:17 [Tom] This is a 24/7 operations. We’re never closed, of course. 2:21 [Al] We collect data for search and rescue. 2:24 [Keith] We had a young girl – 16 year old Abby Sunderland – a rogue wave hit her mast, 2:32 not broke it, and capsized her boat. She fortunately had a search and rescue transmitter on her 2:37 boat that was activated and it allowed us to triangulate from NOAA’s satellites, POES 2:43 and GOES, and give her location to people who could go out to rescue her. 2:47 [Keith] It’s the imagination what you can do with the information. The whole point is 2:51 to bring it down and what can you do with it? 2:54 [Kathy] I often think of Hurricane Katrina and how many lives were saved because folks 3:04 got up in the morning that lived in those areas that were under the warnings or under 3:08 the watches and saw that image of that Category 5 hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico and said, 3:16 “I’m leaving.” How many lives were saved because of our satellites? That’s what we’re 3:22 all about in our satellite operations.