A new NASA mission, PolSIR, short for Polarized Submillimeter Ice-cloud Radiometer, will study high-altitude ice clouds, such as this cloud as seen from the International Space Station in 2008. Understanding how such clouds change throughout the day is crucial for improving global climate models. Credits: NASA
NASA
has selected a new mission to help humanity better understand Earth’s dynamic
atmosphere – specifically, ice clouds that form at high altitudes throughout
tropical and sub-tropical regions. The PolSIR instrument – short for Polarized
Submillimeter Ice-cloud Radiometer – will study such ice clouds to determine
how and why they change throughout the day. This will provide crucial
information about how to accurately simulate these high-altitude clouds in
global climate models.
The
investigation consists of two identical CubeSats – each small satellite is just
a little over a foot tall – flying in orbits separated by three to nine hours.
Over time, these two instruments will observe the clouds’ daily cycle of ice
content.
“Studying
ice clouds is crucial for improving climate forecasts – and this will be the
first time we can study ice clouds in this level of detail,” said Nicola Fox,
associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA
Headquarters in Washington. “Every NASA mission is carefully chosen to better
understand our home planet.”
The
award is for for lifecycle costs no more than $37 million, which does not
include launch costs. The radiometer is an Earth Venture instrument
– lower-cost instruments with a targeted research goal, which typically catch a
ride along with another mission or commercial satellite in order to minimize
launch costs. The Earth Venture class also focuses on providing frequent flight
opportunities, so innovative science investigations can be flown relatively
quickly, generally within five years or less. Missions like this provide key
targeted research opportunities, which help us improve our understanding of
what’s driving change in the entire Earth system.
“Understanding
how these ice clouds respond to a changing climate – and then, in turn,
contribute to further changes – remains one of the great challenges to
predicting what the atmosphere will do in the future,” said Karen St. Germain,
who leads NASA’s Earth Sciences Division. “The radiometers, which measure the
radiant energy emitted by clouds, will significantly improve our understanding
of how ice clouds change and respond throughout the day.”
The
mission is led by Ralf Bennartz, principal investigator at Vanderbilt
University in Nashville, Tennessee, and by Dong Wu, deputy principal
investigator at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
NASA Goddard will provide the project management team that builds the two instruments, while science operations will be conducted by the Space Science and Engineering Center at the University of Wisconsin - Madison. The two spacecraft will be built by Blue Canyon Technologies in Lafayette, Colorado.
For
more information about NASA’s Earth science missions, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/Earth
Source: NASA Mission to Study Ice Clouds, Help Observe Our Dynamic Atmosphere | NASA
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