Sunlight glints off patches of ice in the Chukchi Sea, a part of the Arctic Ocean. NASA’s PREFIRE mission to Earth’s polar regions will explore how a warming world will affect sea ice loss, ice sheet melt, and sea level rise. NASA/Kathryn Hansen
Launching in spring 2024, the two small satellites of the agency’s PREFIRE
mission will fill in missing data from Earth’s polar regions.
Two new miniature NASA satellites
will start crisscrossing Earth’s atmosphere in a few months, detecting heat
lost to space. Their observations from the planet’s most bone-chilling regions
will help predict how our ice, seas, and weather will change in the face of
global warming.
About the size of a shoebox, the
cube satellites, or CubeSats, comprise a mission called PREFIRE, short
for Polar
Radiant Energy in the Far-InfraRed Experiment. Equipped with technology proven at Mars, their
objective is to reveal the full spectrum of heat loss from Earth’s polar
regions for the first time, making climate models more accurate.
PREFIRE has been jointly developed
by NASA and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with team members from the
universities of Michigan and Colorado.
The mission starts with Earth’s energy budget. In a planetary balancing act, the amount of heat
energy the planet receives from the Sun should ideally be offset by the amount
it radiates out of the Earth system into space. The difference between incoming
and outgoing energy determines Earth’s temperature and shapes our climate.
The PREFIRE mission will send two CubeSats – depicted in an artist’s concept orbiting Earth – into space to study how much heat the planet absorbs and emits from its polar regions. These measurements will inform climate and ice models. NASA/JPL-Caltech
Polar regions play a key role in the process, acting like Earth’s radiator
fins. The stirring of air and water, through weather and ocean currents, moves
heat energy received in the tropics toward the poles, where it is emitted as
thermal infrared radiation – the same type of energy you feel from a heat lamp.
Some 60% of that energy flows out to space in far-infrared wavelengths that
have never been systematically measured.
PREFIRE can close that gap. “We
have the potential to discover some fundamental things about how our planet
works,” said Brian Drouin, scientist and deputy principal investigator for the
mission at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
“In climate projections, a lot of
the uncertainty comes in from what we don’t know about the North and South
poles and how efficiently radiation is emitted into space,” he said. “The
importance of that radiation wasn’t realized for much of the Space Age, but we
know now and are aiming to measure it.”
Launching from New Zealand two
weeks apart in May, each satellite will carry a thermal infrared spectrometer.
The JPL-designed instruments include specially shaped mirrors and detectors for
splitting and measuring infrared light. Similar technology is used by the Mars
Climate Sounder on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to explore the Red Planet’s
atmosphere and weather.
Miniaturizing the instruments to
fit on CubeSats was a challenge for the PREFIRE engineering team. They
developed a scaled-down design optimized for the comparatively warm conditions
of our own planet. Weighing less than 6 pounds (3 kilograms), the instruments
make readings using a device called a thermocouple, similar to the sensors
found in many household thermostats.
Ground Zero
for Climate Change
To maximize coverage, the PREFIRE
twins will orbit Earth along different paths, overlapping every few hours near
the poles.
Since the 1970s, the Arctic has
warmed at least three times faster than anywhere else on Earth. Winter sea ice
there has shrunk by more than 15,900 square miles (41,200 square kilometers) per year,
a loss of 2.6% per decade relative to the 1981-2010 average. A change is
occurring on the opposite side of the planet, too: Antarctica’s ice sheets are
losing mass at an average rate of about 150 billion tons per year.
The implications of these changes
are far reaching. Fluctuations in sea ice shape polar ecosystems and influence
the temperature as well as circulation of the ocean. Meltwater from mile-thick
ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica is responsible for about one-third of
the rise in global
mean sea level since 1993.
“If you change the polar regions,
you also fundamentally change the weather around the world,” said Tristan
L’Ecuyer, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the mission’s
principal investigator. “Extreme storms, flooding, coastal erosion – all of
these things are influenced by what’s going on in the Arctic and Antarctic.”
To understand and project such
changes, scientists use climate models that take into account many physical
processes. Running the models multiple times (each time under slightly
different conditions and assumptions) results in an ensemble of climate projections.
Assumptions about uncertain parameters, such as how efficiently the poles emit
thermal radiation, can significantly impact the projections.
PREFIRE will supply new data on a
range of climate variables, including atmospheric temperature, surface
properties, water vapor, and clouds. Ultimately, more information will yield a
more accurate vision of a world in flux, said L’Ecuyer.
“As our climate models converge, we’ll start to really understand what the future’s going to look like in the Arctic and Antarctic,” he added.
Source: Meet NASA’s Twin Spacecraft Headed to the Ends of the Earth - NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment