NASA has selected six new airborne missions that include domestic and international studies of fire-induced clouds, Arctic coastal change, air quality, landslide hazards, shrinking glaciers, and emissions from agricultural lands. NASA’s suite of airborne missions complement what scientists can see from orbit, measure from the ground, and simulate in computer models.
Funded through the agency's Earth Venture program, the missions center
around the use of instruments mounted on aircraft to make measurements in finer
detail—both in spatial resolution and shorter time scales—than can be made by
many satellites. Competitively selected, the missions provide opportunities to
supplement satellite observations and make innovative measurements.
"These missions will help us interpret what our current satellites
are seeing from space and test new ideas and techniques for our upcoming Earth
System Observatory," said Karen St. Germain, director of NASA's Earth
Science Division. "There is also a strong focus on actionable Earth
science—gathering fundamental observations that have connections to our economy
and societal decision-making and information needs."
NASA's newest Earth Ventures missions include studies of how climate change is altering carbon emissions and water and ice flows across Arctic coastal regions. Credit: Landsat/USGS/NASA Earth Observatory
Roughly $120 million has been
allotted for the six missions, which will deploy at various times from 2026 to
2029. Three lead investigators were chosen for each mission, with at least one
required to be an early career scientist. Full staffing of the science teams
and selection of complementary instruments will be competed in the coming
months. These changes in the selection process were made to promote diversity,
equity, and inclusion in the teams.
"We are constantly looking to
foster the growth of the next generation of scientists," said Barry Lefer,
the program manager who led the Earth Venture selection panels at NASA
Headquarters in Washington. "This round of missions will put an extra
emphasis on bringing new people into mission planning and leadership."
The six missions include:
Arctic coastal
change
Maria Tzortziou of the City College
of New York will lead a project to observe changes in river systems on the
North Slope of Alaska. Known as FORTE (short for Arctic Coastlines–The
Frontlines of Rapidly Transforming Ecosystems), the project will combine
optical and radar measurements from planes, helicopters, boats, and drones to
measure water flows and chemistry and observe how ecosystems respond to
changing climate. The team will collaborate with indigenous communities to
sustain observations over time.
Clouds created by fire
In one of NASA's newest Earth Ventures missions, researchers will investigate the conditions that lead to the formation of pyrocumulonimbus "fire clouds." Extreme wildland fires can create their own weather and inject smoke into the stratosphere. Courtesy of David Peterson, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
In PYREX—the Pyrocumulonimbus
Experiment—David Peterson of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington will
lead a study of pyrocumulonimbus clouds, which form when wildfires burn hot
enough to make their own weather. Flying over the western U.S. and Canada,
researchers will examine the fire characteristics that produce
pyrocumulonimbus, while exploring the mechanisms that lead these clouds to
inject smoke into the stratosphere, where it can have climate effects.
Urban air
pollution
James Crawford of NASA's Langley
Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, will lead HAMAQ (Hemispheric Airborne
Measurements of Air Quality), a project that capitalizes on the recent launches
of NASA's TEMPO pollution-monitoring satellite instrument and comparable
measurements made by Korean and European satellites. Over Mexico City and a
U.S. city to be determined, scientists will investigate areas of poor air
quality and test how satellite information can help improve ground-based
forecasting and mitigation strategies.
Shifting
weather, shifting lands
Climate change is leading to more
extreme droughts and rainfall events that affect the stability of hillslopes
and the soil and rock on them. Led by Alexander Handwerger of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, LACCE (Landslide Climate Change
Experiment) will combine airborne measurements with land-based sensors to track
the way slopes and landslides are changing as water moves differently across
the landscape.
Glacier retreat
John Holt of the University of
Arizona will lead Snow4Flow, a project to quantify the retreat of glaciers and
ice sheets in ways that can lead to better projections of land-ice change. In
Alaska, southeastern Greenland, the Canadian Arctic, and Svalbard, the team
will use microwave and high-frequency radar sounders to measure snow
accumulation, ice melting, and changes in ice thickness and motion.
Agricultural
emissions
While the burning of fossil fuels
remains the leading source of carbon in our atmosphere, farmlands and
ranchlands are also substantial sources of gas and particle emissions. In the
NTERFAACE (Nitrogen and Carbon Terrestrial Fluxes: Agriculture, Atmospheric
Composition, and Ecosystems) mission, led by Glenn Wolfe of NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, researchers will measure the amount
of greenhouse gases, nitrogen, and other pollutants that are emitted from
agricultural lands across the United States.
The PYREX and Snow4Flow missions
are funded at $30 million each, while the other four projects will each receive
$15 million. These six investigations were selected from 42 proposals. The 2024
selections represent the fourth series of NASA Earth Venture investigations,
which were first recommended by the National Research Council in 2007.
For more on NASA Earth Science, visit: science.nasa.gov/earth
Source: NASA Selects New Aircraft-Driven Studies of Earth and Climate Change - NASA Science
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