Data from one of the two CubeSats that comprise NASA’s PREFIRE mission
was used to make this data visualization showing brightness temperature — the
intensity of infrared emissions — over Greenland. Red represents more intense
emissions; blue indicates lower intensities. The data was captured in July.
NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
The PREFIRE mission will help
develop a more detailed understanding of how much heat the Arctic and
Antarctica radiate into space and how this influences global climate.
NASA’s newest climate mission has
started collecting data on the amount of heat in the form of far-infrared
radiation that the Arctic and Antarctic environments emit to space. These
measurements by the Polar Radiant Energy in the Far-Infrared Experiment (PREFIRE) are key to better predicting how climate change will
affect Earth’s ice, seas, and weather — information that will help humanity
better prepare for a changing world.
One of PREFIRE’s two shoebox-size
cube satellites, or CubeSats, launched on May 25 from New Zealand, followed by its twin on June 5. The first CubeSat started sending back science data on
July 1. The second CubeSat began collecting science data on July 25, and the
mission will release the data after an issue with the GPS system on this
CubeSat is resolved.
The PREFIRE mission will help
researchers gain a clearer understanding of when and where the Arctic and
Antarctica emit far-infrared radiation (wavelengths greater than 15
micrometers) to space. This includes how atmospheric water vapor and clouds
influence the amount of heat that escapes Earth. Since clouds and water vapor
can trap far-infrared radiation near Earth’s surface, they can increase global
temperatures as part of a process known as the greenhouse effect. This is where gases in Earth’s atmosphere — such as carbon dioxide,
methane, and water vapor — act as insulators, preventing heat emitted by the
planet from escaping to space.
“We are constantly looking for new
ways to observe the planet and fill in critical gaps in our knowledge. With
CubeSats like PREFIRE, we are doing both,” said Karen St. Germain, director of
the Earth Science Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “The mission,
part of our competitively-selected Earth Venture program, is a great example of
the innovative science we can achieve through collaboration with university and
industry partners.”
Earth absorbs much of the Sun’s
energy in the tropics; weather and ocean currents transport that heat toward
the Arctic and Antarctica, which receive much less sunlight. The polar
environment — including ice, snow, and clouds — emits a lot of that heat into
space, much of which is in the form of far-infrared radiation. But those
emissions have never been systematically measured, which is where PREFIRE comes
in.
“It’s so exciting to see the data
coming in,” said Tristan L’Ecuyer, PREFIRE’s principal investigator and a
climate scientist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. “With the addition
of the far-infrared measurements from PREFIRE, we’re seeing for the first time
the full energy spectrum that Earth radiates into space, which is critical to
understanding climate change.”
This visualization of PREFIRE data
(above) shows brightness temperatures — or the intensity of radiation emitted
from Earth at several wavelengths, including the far-infrared. Yellow and red
indicate more intense emissions originating from Earth’s surface, while blue
and green represent lower emission intensities coinciding with colder areas on
the surface or in the atmosphere.
The visualization starts by showing
data on mid-infrared emissions (wavelengths between 4 to 15 micrometers) taken
in early July during several polar orbits by the first CubeSat to launch. It
then zooms in on two passes over Greenland. The orbital tracks expand
vertically to show how far-infrared emissions vary through the atmosphere. The
visualization ends by focusing on an area where the two passes intersect,
showing how the intensity of far-infrared emissions changed over the nine hours
between these two orbits.
The two PREFIRE CubeSats are in
asynchronous, near-polar orbits, which means they pass over the same spots in
the Arctic and Antarctic within hours of each other, collecting the same kind
of data. This gives researchers a time series of measurements that they can use
to study relatively short-lived phenomena like ice sheet melting or cloud
formation and how they affect far-infrared emissions over time.
More About
PREFIRE
The PREFIRE mission was jointly
developed by NASA and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. A division of
Caltech in Pasadena, California, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory manages the
mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate and provided the spectrometers.
Blue Canyon Technologies built and now operates the CubeSats, and the
University of Wisconsin-Madison is processing and analyzing the data collected
by the instruments.
To learn more about PREFIRE, visit:
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/prefire/
by Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Source: NASA Mission Gets Its First Snapshot of Polar Heat Emissions - NASA
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