An engineering geologist measures water depth at an agricultural well in a field north of Sacramento, California. Groundwater is an important source of water for irrigation in the state’s Central Valley, especially during times of drought, and the GRACE missions provide data that helps track the resource. Kelly M. Grow/California Department of Water Resources
The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment-Continuity mission will extend
a decades-long record of following shifting water masses using gravity
measurements.
NASA and the German Space Agency at
DLR (German Aerospace Center) have agreed to jointly build, launch, and operate
a pair of spacecraft that will yield insights into how Earth’s water, ice, and
land masses are shifting by measuring monthly changes in the planet’s gravity
field. Tracking large-scale mass changes – showing when and where water moves
within and between the atmosphere, oceans, underground aquifers, and ice sheets
– provides a view into Earth’s water cycle, including changes in response to drivers
like climate change.
With the international agreement
signed in late 2023, the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment-Continuity
(GRACE-C) mission will extend a nearly 25-year legacy that began with the 2002
launch of the GRACE mission. The GRACE-Follow On (GRACE-FO) mission succeeded GRACE in 2018. GRACE-C is
targeting a launch no earlier than 2028.
The data from the GRACE missions is
considered key information in characterizing Earth’s climate. Those
measurements, together with other information and computer models, are
regularly used for drought assessment and forecasting, water-use planning for agriculture, and understanding the drivers of sea level rise, such as how much ice the world’s ice sheets are losing.
“GRACE-C represents an
international and collaborative effort to observe and study one of our planet’s
most precious resources,” said Nicola Fox, associate administrator for science
at NASA in Washington. “From our coastlines to our kitchen tables, there is no
aspect of our planet that is not impacted by changes in the water cycle. The
partnership between NASA and the German Aerospace Center will serve a critical
role in preparing for the challenges we face today and tomorrow.”
Explore the
GRACE-FO mission in NASA's Eyes on the Earth
Engineers and scientists are finalizing design details for the instruments
and satellites, and then teams will start work on fabricating and building. The
mission will be composed of a pair of identical satellites flying one behind
the other, roughly 60 to 190 miles (100 to 300 kilometers) apart, in a polar
orbit. The spacecraft will fly at an altitude of roughly 300 miles (500
kilometers). Together they will monitor monthly changes to the distribution of
water on Earth from variations in the planet’s gravity field.
Following the
Water
The pull of gravity varies
naturally from place to place on Earth depending on the mass distribution near
the surface. For instance, large shifts in underground water storage
(groundwater) or losses from ice sheets move a great amount of mass around, which
can in turn shift the planet’s gravity field on weekly to monthly time scales.
Researchers can gauge those changes
by measuring very small changes in the distance between the two GRACE-C
satellites. As the lead spacecraft flies over an area with relatively more mass
– like a spot with more groundwater than its surroundings – the slight increase
in Earth’s gravity field pulls the satellite forward, increasing its distance
from the trailing spacecraft. Capable of measuring distance changes 100 times
smaller than the thickness of a human hair, a laser ranging interferometer (LRI) instrument continually measures the
distance between the two spacecraft.
The satellite systems and orbit for
GRACE-C will be similar to those of GRACE-FO, ensuring the continuity of
measurements between the two missions.
“GRACE-C will build on decades of
observations of the global movement of water and changes in water resources.
This is critical to informing predictions of future trends in our climate and
to assess food and water security,” said Frank Webb, GRACE-C project scientist
at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “The mission is an
example of the commitment that NASA and our German partners share for studying
the Earth and helping society better prepare for a warming world.”
GRACE-C, previously known as the
Mass Change mission, addresses one of the key goals outlined in the 2017
Decadal Survey for Earth Science conducted by the U.S. National Academies of
Science, Engineering, and Medicine: to better understand the planet’s global
water cycle through large-scale changes in Earth’s mass.
“Together with NASA, we are now
continuing along the GRACE route in Earth observation, thereby strengthening
our international cooperation in space-based research,” said Walther Pelzer, a
member of the DLR executive board and director general of the German Space
Agency at DLR. “The USA and Germany have been working closely together for a
long time on climate and environmental research from space. The trust that our
U.S. partners are placing in German space expertise for these missions by
commissioning the satellite construction and the delivery of important parts of
the GRACE-C instrumentation and mission control is also a sign of Germany’s
capabilities as a prime location for spaceflight.”
The mission will be part of NASA’s
Earth System Observatory (ESO), a set of Earth-focused missions that will provide data to guide efforts
related to climate change, natural hazard mitigation, wildfire management, and
food security. When combined, ESO mission data will create a holistic view of
Earth from the planet’s atmosphere to its bedrock.
More About the
Mission
JPL manages the GRACE-C mission for
NASA and will procure the two spacecraft from Airbus Defence and Space, the
company that built the satellites for the GRACE and GRACE-FO missions.
Development and construction of the LRI system will be led by JPL, which is
managed for NASA by Caltech in Pasadena. The German contributions are funded by
the German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Action and the
Federal Ministry of Education and Research. The German Space Agency at DLR will
manage the German contributions to GRACE-C, providing the LRI optics
subsystems; mission operations; telemetry, tracking, and command; the ground
data system; the laser retroreflectors to help with satellite positioning; the
launch vehicle; and launch services.
To learn more about GRACE-FO, visit: https://gracefo.jpl.nasa.gov/
Source: US,
Germany Partnering on Mission to Track Earth’s Water Movement - NASA
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