Meet NASA's Ben Hamlington, Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich Research Scientist — Live Q&A

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Launching soon from the U.S. West Coast, the satellite will track sea levels worldwide. In a series of live question-and-answer sessions, we invite you to meet some of the scientists and engineers on the mission.

After living in coastal Virginia and seeing the effects of climate change firsthand, Ben Hamlington is now researching sea level rise at NASA JPL. The launch of the Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite will provide new and better insights about our Earth’s changing ocean.

The world's latest ocean-monitoring satellite is being readied for its launch from California on Nov. 10. The Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich spacecraft will ensure continuity of the Jason series of missions to better our understanding of our rising seas and help shape the future of sea-level studies.

Designed to collect the most accurate satellite data for our continuing measurements of global sea level and to help us understand how our oceans are responding to climate change, the spacecraft is the product of a partnership between NASA, ESA (the European Space Agency), the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT), and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Credit: NASA-JPL/Caltech
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Wow that interview with Ben was fascinating !

susancampbell
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the DAY IN REVIEW newletter email on Oct 7 2020 was sent out at 3:51 pm PDT too late to watch live or chat ? So next week 2 pm PDT ?
Well you know does not have to be live thats not important carry on.

Lightofsol
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Whole lot of talk, not a lot of video of the sea actually rising, because it's not actually Rising...

brianhale
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why did you shut the chat down to much good real info?

AuditorsUnited
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hey did you measure cosmic and galactic rays in the climate change models... were still waiting for the recalculations .... Suspicious0bservers youtube

AuditorsUnited