The Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation (EMIT) is an Earth Ventures-Instrument (EVI-4) Mission to map the mineral composition of arid dust source regions via imaging spectroscopy in the visible and short-wave infrared. The maps of the source regions will be used to improve forecasts of the role of mineral dust in the radiative forcing (warming or cooling) of the atmosphere.
EMIT is being developed at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory and is scheduled to launch in 2022. The instrument will
observe Earth from outside the International Space Station. Once it begins
operation, EMIT data will be delivered to the NASA Land Processes Distributed
Active Archive Center (DAAC) for use by other researchers and the public.
When strong winds on one continent stir
up mineral rock dust (such as calcite or chlorite), the airborne particles can
travel thousands of miles to affect entirely different continents. Dust
suspended in the air can heat or cool the atmosphere and Earth’s surface. This
heating or cooling effect is the focus of NASA’s Earth Surface Mineral Dust
Source Investigation (EMIT) mission.
Mineral dust has many other effects on
our planet. It can help form clouds or change atmospheric chemistry. When the
dust settles in water or on land it can provide nutrients for ecosystem growth.
If it falls on snow or ice, mineral dust can increase sunlight absorption and
accelerate melting. Mineral dust in the air can reduce visibility or harm human
health.
Scientists know that most of the mineral
dust transported in Earth’s atmosphere comes from arid, or dry, regions around
the globe. But they aren’t certain what types of minerals the wind carries from
those regions. Different minerals affect the environment in different ways. So
scientists need to know what minerals are in dust source regions if they’re
going to better understand how the dust is affecting the Earth. EMIT will
provide this missing dust source information.
The data will allow scientists to create
a new mineral map of Earth’s dust-producing regions. The map will improve
computer models that scientists will use to assess the regional and global
heating and cooling effects of mineral dust today and in the future.
Get to know more: https://earth.jpl.nasa.gov/emit/mission/about/
Scientists note: https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2022/05/june-launch-nasa-cornell-tool-view-dust-space
Source: What is EMIT? – Scents
of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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