00:00That's a great question.
00:07In fact, two or three thousand years ago, ancient people on this planet that did great
00:13things figured out that the Earth was round, it was a sphere.
00:17This was a magical revelation for the Greeks and the Egyptians who were able to see from
00:22the motions of the stars and the way the sun moved, they saw the way the sun's shadow worked
00:28in different places.
00:30And they figured, well, it's only possible if the Earth is round.
00:34And they took that information and it extended into the time of the great mariners that explored
00:39our Earth by ships.
00:41They made the first orbit of Earth by sea and they knew the Earth was round, allowing
00:45them to go across one ocean and come back home the other way.
00:49If the Earth were flat, they would have sailed off the end.
00:51And so we knew that.
00:52But then, at the dawn of the space age, in the late 50s and 60s, we were able to see
00:58for ourselves that our beautiful home is a gorgeous round object known as a sphere.
01:04And that was really special.
01:06It put ourselves into context of our solar system and our universe.
01:09We have a big round sun and a beautiful round Earth and a round Mars.
01:14And today we use the roundness of Earth, the spherical Earth, to use methods in space geodesy
01:20to figure out where we are, where we're going.
01:23I haven't been lost in years.
01:25That's pretty good.
01:26What's happening to the Earth, what's happening to our oceans as we take the pulse of our
01:30planet and consider other worlds beyond as we explore those.
01:34So as we get ready to go back to the moon with women and men and explore other worlds,
01:39the roundness of our solar system and our universe is a special thing.
01:43And we should embrace that as we understand why our planet isn't flat.
01:56NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
02:26NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
Comments