Earth’s polar regions radiates much of the heat initially absorbed at the tropics out to space, mostly in the form of far-infrared radiation. Clouds in the Arctic — like these seen over a Greenland glacier — and Antarctic can trap far-infrared radiation on Earth, increasing global temperatures. NASA/GSFC/Michael Studinger
Information from the PREFIRE mission
will illuminate how clouds and water vapor in the Arctic and Antarctic
influence the amount of heat the poles radiate into space.
A pair of new shoebox-size NASA
satellites will help unravel an atmospheric mystery that’s bedeviled scientists
for years: how the behavior of clouds and water vapor at Earth’s polar regions
affects our planet’s climate.
The first CubeSat in NASA’s Polar
Radiant Energy in the Far-InfraRed Experiment (PREFIRE) mission launched from New Zealand on Saturday, May 25. The second PREFIRE CubeSat
is targeted to lift off on Saturday, June 1, with a launch window opening at 3
p.m. NZST (11 p.m. EDT, Friday, May 31).
The mission will measure the amount of heat Earth emits into space from the two coldest, most remote regions on the planet. Data from PREFIRE will improve computer models that researchers use to predict how Earth’s ice, seas, and weather will change in a warming world.
This video gives an overview of the PREFIRE
mission, which aims to improve global climate change predictions by expanding
scientists’ understanding of heat radiated from Earth at the polar regions.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Earth absorbs a lot of the Sun’s
energy in the tropics, and weather and ocean currents transport that heat
toward the poles (which receive much less sunlight). Ice, snow, and clouds,
among other parts of the polar environment, emit some of that heat into space,
much of it in the form of far-infrared radiation. The difference between the
amount of heat Earth absorbs at the tropics and that radiated out from the
Arctic and Antarctic is a key influence on the planet’s temperature, helping to
drive dynamic systems of climate and weather.
But far-infrared emissions at the
poles have never been systematically measured. This is where PREFIRE comes in.
The mission will help researchers gain a clearer understanding of when and
where Earth’s polar regions emit far-infrared radiation to space, as well as
how atmospheric water vapor and clouds influence the amount that escapes.
One of the two shoebox-size CubeSats that make up NASA’s PREFIRE mission sits on a table at Blue Canyon Technologies. The company built the satellite bus and integrated the JPL-provided thermal infrared spectrometer instrument. NASA/JPL-Caltech
Clouds and water vapor can trap far-infrared radiation on Earth, thereby
increasing global temperatures — part of the greenhouse effect.
“It’s critical that we get the
effects of clouds right if we want to accurately model Earth’s climate,” said
Tristan L’Ecuyer, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and
PREFIRE’s principal investigator.
Clouds in
Climate Modeling
Clouds and water vapor at Earth’s
poles act like windows on a summer day: A clear, relatively dry day in the
Arctic is like opening a window to let heat out of a stuffy room. A cloudy,
relatively humid day traps heat like a closed window.
The types of clouds — and the
altitude at which they form — influence how much heat the polar atmosphere
retains. Like a tinted window, low-altitude clouds, composed mainly of water
droplets, tend to have a cooling effect. High-altitude clouds, made mainly of
ice particles, more readily absorb heat, generating a warming effect. Because
clouds at mid-altitudes can have varying water-droplet and ice-particle
contents, they can have either a warming or cooling effect.
But clouds are notoriously
difficult to study: They’re made up of microscopic particles that can move and
change in a matter of seconds to hours. When it rains or snows, there’s a great
reshuffling of water and energy that can alter the character of clouds
entirely. These ever-changing factors complicate the task of realistically
capturing cloud behavior in climate models, which try to project global climate
scenarios.
Inconsistencies in how various
climate models represent clouds can mean the difference between predicting 5 or
10 degrees Fahrenheit (3 or 6 degrees Celsius) of warming. The PREFIRE mission
aims to reduce that uncertainty.
The thermal infrared spectrometer
on each spacecraft will make crucial measurements of wavelengths of light in
the far-infrared range. The instruments will be able to detect clouds largely
invisible to other types of optical instruments. And PREFIRE’s instruments will
be sensitive enough to detect the approximate size of particles to distinguish
between liquid droplets and ice particles.
“PREFIRE will give us a new set of
eyes on clouds,” said Brian Kahn, an atmospheric scientist at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory and a member of the PREFIRE science team. “We’re not
quite sure what we’re going to see, and that’s really exciting.”
More About the
Mission
PREFIRE was jointly developed by
NASA and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. A division of Caltech in
Pasadena, California, JPL manages the mission for NASA’s Science Mission
Directorate and provided the spectrometers. Blue Canyon Technologies built the
CubeSats, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison will process and analyze the
data the instruments collect.
NASA’s Launch Services Program
selected Rocket Lab to launch both spacecraft as part of the agency’s
Venture-class Acquisition of Dedicated and Rideshare (VADR) contract. CubeSats like PREFIRE serve as an ideal platform for technical
and architecture innovation, contributing to NASA’s science research and
technology development.
To learn more about PREFIRE, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/prefire/
Source: Twin NASA Satellites Ready to Help Gauge Earth’s Energy Balance - NASA
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