Thursday, August 14, 2014

Fwd: OCO-2 makes its first carbon measurement from space



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From: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Date: August 14, 2014 2:13:20 PM CDT
To: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Subject: FW: OCO-2 makes its first carbon measurement from space


 

 

OCO 2 makes its first carbon measurement from space
BY STEPHEN CLARK
SPACEFLIGHT NOW

August 13, 2014

A satellite launched last month has reached its operational perch 438 miles above Earth and started collecting data on the global distribution of carbon dioxide, a gas linked to climate change, NASA announced this week.


Artist's concept of the OCO 2 spacecraft. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
 
The $468 million Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2 mission will spend at least two years identifying sources and sinks of atmospheric carbon dioxide, places where the gas is emitted into the atmosphere and absorbed back into oceans and plants.

After its release into a preliminary orbit after launching July 2 aboard a Delta 2 rocket, OCO 2 raised its altitude to join a network of NASA and international Earth observation satellites flying in formation around the planet once every 98 minutes.

The "A-train" satellite constellation allows scientists to compare observations from multiple satellites each designed to measure different parts of the Earth's atmosphere, climate, oceans and land.

OCO 2 is positioned at the "head" of the A-train as its spectral instrument measures the glint of sunlight reflected off the column of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

The spacecraft arrived in its final operational position Aug. 3, according to NASA.

Japan's GCOM W1 water cycle research observatory and NASA's Aqua, CALIPSO, CloudSat and Aura satellites fly in the A-train behind OCO 2. The satellites fly over roughly the same location on Earth within 16 minutes of each other.

The half-ton satellite will not only track the geographical distribution of carbon dioxide, but its single science sensor will also monitor how concentrations of the greenhouse gas change with the seasons.


OCO 2 launched July 2 on a Delta 2 rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls
 
Scientists say carbon dioxide is the leading human-produced greenhouse gas driving climate change, so understanding the carbon cycle is important for quantifying the role of fossil fuels in carbon dioxide production and forecasting how concentrations of the greenhouse gas will change in the future.

Satellite monitoring of carbon dioxide could yield a significant leap in understanding how the carbon cycle is linked to global warming.

With OCO 2 at its intended altitude, ground controllers began cooling down the satellite's spectral instrument to bring it into focus, according to a NASA press release.

The instrument collected its first data Aug. 6.

"The initial data from OCO-2 appear exactly as expected -- the spectral lines are well resolved, sharp and deep," said Randy Pollock, OCO 2 chief architect and calibration lead at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. "We still have a lot of work to do to go from having a working instrument to having a well-calibrated and scientifically useful instrument, but this was an important milestone on this journey."

Officials say calibration of OCO 2's instrument will continue for several more weeks, followed by testing of the mission's data processing system on the ground.

Spectral data from OCO 2 will be available for dissemination to the global science community before the end of the year, followed by delivery of estimates of carbon dioxide to scientists in early 2015, NASA officials said.  

 

© 2014 Spaceflight Now Inc.

 


 

 

NASA Satellite Takes First Look at Earth's Carbon Dioxide

By Mike Wall, Senior Writer   |   August 13, 2014 05:42pm ET

 

Artist's Rendition of the OCO-2 Observatory

Artist's rendition of NASA's OCO-2 satellite in orbit. OCO-2 launched on July 2, 2014 and made its first science measurements a month later, on Aug. 6.
Credit: JPL/NASA View full size image

NASA's newest satellite has arrived in its final orbit and begun tracking levels of the heat-trapping gas carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere.

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory 2 (OCO-2), which blasted off July 2, arrived in its final orbit 438 miles (705 kilometers) above the Earth on Aug. 3. The satellite then collected its first test data three days later while flying over Papua New Guinea, agency officials said.

"The initial data from OCO-2 appear exactly as expected — the spectral lines are well resolved, sharp and deep," OCO-2's chief architect and calibration lead, Randy Pollock, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said in a statement Monday (Aug. 11). "We still have a lot of work to do to go from having a working instrument to having a well-calibrated and scientifically useful instrument, but this was an important milestone on this journey."

OCO-2 is the first operational NASA satellite dedicated to measuring atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide, which scientists say is largely responsible for Earth's recent warming trend. Concentrations of the gas in Earth's air have risen from 280 parts per million (ppm) before the Industrial Revolution to about 400 ppm today, primarily due to the burning of fossil fuels and other human activities.

OCO-2 will use its single scientific instrument, a grading spectrometer, to gather precise CO2 data thousands of times each day, helping researchers get a much clearer picture of how the gas is cycling through the atmosphere — what sources are pumping it out, and which "sinks" are sucking it up, NASA officials said.


The OCO-2 mission team will calibrate the spacecraft's spectrometer over the next few weeks. The satellite will also beam to Earth up to 1 million scientific measurements every day, to help test out data-processing systems on the ground, NASA officials said. The $465 million mission should start delivering calibrated science data before the end of 2014, they added.By reaching its ultimate, near-polar orbit, OCO-2 joined five other Earth-observation satellites in a constellation known as the "A-Train." (The name is short for "Afternoon Train"; all of the spacecraft cross the equator going north in the early afternoon local time.)

OCO-2 is virtually identical to the original Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) satellite, which was lost during a launch failure in February 2009.

 

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