A-Train Status AMSR-E Science Team Meeting

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Afternoon Constellation
Presentation transcript:

A-Train Status AMSR-E Science Team Meeting August 14-16. 2007 Missoula, Montana A-Train Status Expanded Capabilities In the A-Train Constellation of Earth Observing Satellites Angelita (Angie) C. Kelly Constellation Team Manager NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Acknowledgement: Material presented is based on the work of the A-Train Mission Operations Working Group.

TOPICS Afternoon Constellation “A-Train” Overview Future Missions Why Fly Constellations? Expanded Science Observing Capabilities Future Missions Constellation Operations Coordination Lessons Learned Other Related Topics

Earth Observing Constellations Why Fly Constellations? The Earth science community has long advocated placing numerous instruments in space to study the Earth and its environment. Constellations provide the opportunity to make coincident, co-registered, and nearly simultaneous science measurements from a range of instruments. The satellites are aligned in their orbital positions so their instrument fields of views overlap. Earth science data from one satellite’s instrument can be correlated with data from another. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts

Afternoon Constellation Evolution 2002

Afternoon Constellation Evolution Aura and PARASOL joined in 2004

Afternoon Constellation Evolution CloudSat and CALIPSO joined in 2006

Afternoon Constellation Evolution Glory and OCO to be launched in late 2008

Afternoon Constellation Coincidental Observations (Source: M. Schoeberl) MODIS/ CERES IR Properties of Clouds AIRS Temperature and H2O Sounding Aqua CloudSat PARASOL CALIPSO- Aerosol and cloud heights Cloudsat - cloud droplets PARASOL - aerosol and cloud polarization OCO - CO2 CALIPSO OCO OCO - CO2 column Aura OMI - Cloud heights OMI & HIRLDS – Aerosols MLS& TES - H2O & temp profiles MLS & HIRDLS – Cirrus clouds Glory

The Afternoon Constellation Is an International Undertaking

Principal Investigators/Project Scientists and International Partners for Constellation Missions

EOS Aqua Investigates the Earth's water cycle, including evaporation from the oceans, water vapor in the atmosphere, clouds, precipitation, soil moisture, sea ice, land ice, and snow cover on the land and ice. Instruments AIRS: Atmospheric Infrared Sounder – Obtains highly accurate temperature profiles within the atmosphere AMSU-A: Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit – Obtains temperature profiles in the upper atmosphere (especially the stratosphere) and provides a cloud-filtering capability for tropospheric temperature observations HSB: Humidity Sounder for Brazil – 4-channel microwave sounder aimed at obtaining humidity profiles throughout the atmosphere. AMSR-E: Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for EOS – Uses a twelve-channel, six-frequency, microwave radiometer system to measures precipitation rate, cloud water, water vapor, sea surface winds, sea surface temperature, ice, snow, and soil moisture MODIS: Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer – Similar to Terra CERES: Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System – Similar to Terra

EOS Aura Researches the composition, chemistry, and dynamics of the Earth’s atmosphere as well as study the ozone, air quality, and climate. Instruments HIRDLS: High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder – Observes global distribution of temperature and composition of the upper troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere MLS: Microwave Limb Sounder – Uses microwave emission to measure stratospheric temperature and upper tropospheric constituents OMI : Ozone Monitoring Instrument – Distinguishes between aerosol types, such as smoke, dust, and sulfates. Measure cloud pressure and coverage, which provide data to derive tropospheric ozone. TES: Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer – High-resolution infrared-imaging Fourier transform spectrometer that offers a line-width-limited discrimination of essentially all radiatively active molecular species in the Earth's lower atmosphere.

PARASOL A CNES satellite that studies the role of clouds and aerosols (Polarization and Anisotropy of Reflectances for Atmospheric Science coupled with Observations from a LIDAR) A CNES satellite that studies the role of clouds and aerosols POLDER: Improve the microphysical and radiative property characterization of clouds and aerosols for model improvement. Instrument Source: CNES

CloudSat NASA satellite with the Cloud Profiling Radar (CPR) instrument, a 94-GHz nadir-looking radar Measures the power backscattered by clouds as a function of distance from the radar. Developed jointly by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA). Will advance our understanding of cloud abundance, distribution, structure, and radiative properties. First satellite-based millimeter-wavelength cloud radar > 1000 times more sensitive than existing ground weather radars Able to detect the much smaller particles of liquid water and ice (ground-based weather radars use centimeter wavelengths) Cloud Profiling Radar

CALIPSO Joint NASA/CNES satellite Three instruments: Cloud-Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization (CALIOP): Two wavelength polarization-sensitive Lidar that provides high-resolution vertical profiles of aerosols and clouds Wide Field Camera (WFC): Fixed, nadir-viewing imager with a single spectral channel covering the 620-670 nm region Imaging Infrared Radiometer (IIR): Nadir-viewing, non-scanning imager

Future Missions Two more missions are set to join the A-Train after they launch in late 2008: The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) will Provide space-based observations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), the principal human-initiated driver of climate change. The Glory mission will Collect data on the chemical, microphysical, and optical properties, and spatial and temporal distributions of aerosols, and Continue collection of total solar irradiance data for the long-term climate record. OCO Glory

Afternoon Constellation Operations Coordination

A-Train Operations The Afternoon Constellation Mission Operations Working Group (MOWG) Formed in 2003 to coordinate constellation operations and to ensure “safe constellation flying” Membership comprises science and mission operations personnel from each mission from both sides of the Atlantic. Each group has its own culture and philosophy on how to ensure safe Operations. Each mission has its own control center and orbit computation system SAFETY is the number one priority for constellation operations The MOWG established baseline Constellation agreements and guidelines that members agreed to follow. Constellation Operations Coordination Plan Constellation Operations Contingency Procedures Each mission team operates independently but all mission teams are committed to keeping the constellation safe.

Afternoon Constellation Mission Operations Working Group (MOWG) Charter Ensure the integrity and safety of the constellation through cooperative agreements and actions Agree on the baseline Constellation orbital configuration Provide a forum for defining changes to the baseline Constellation configuration Facilitate coordination of multi-satellite science campaigns Review specific mission plans that might impact the other Constellation missions Provide the forum for discussing and resolving issues between member satellites Provide consultation support for teams proposing new missions to fly in the A-Train

Lessons Learned Cooperation and coordination are essential to keeping the constellation safe The various mission teams of the constellation now operate as a coordinated and cooperative “A-Train mission team” Pre-launch constellation simulations are valuable for identifying areas needing improvement Data products and interface requirements were made consistent Early Science Team and high level management support is key to the success of Constellation operations Continued coordination between operations and science teams is critical to ensure safety New missions that want to join the constellation can benefit from early coordination with the A-Train MOWG Safe Constellation operations enable unprecedented opportunities to increase our understanding of the health of our home planet.

Acknowledgements The success of the Afternoon Constellation has been possible due to the: Direction and support provided by the Project Scientists and Principal Investigators, and the Professionalism, cooperation, and dedication of the Mission Operations teams

• Orbital Debris Avoidance Related Topics • A-Train Data Depot • Orbital Debris Avoidance

URL: http://disc.gsfc.nasa.gov/atdd/ A-Train Data Depot The primary objective of Data Depot (ATDD), is to process, archive, provide access, visualize, analyze and correlate distributed atmosphere measurements from various A-Train instruments along A-Train tracks. The Depot will enable the free movement of remotely located A-Train data so that they are combined to create a consolidated, almost synoptic, vertical view of the Earth's atmosphere. Once the infrastructure of the Depot is in place, it will be easily evolved to serve data from all A-Train data measurements: one-stop-shopping. URL: http://disc.gsfc.nasa.gov/atdd/

The A-Train Data Depot Goals Provide a tool that allows A-Train sensor data to be provided with first order temporal and spatial correlations (coincidence) already performed for the scientist. Be responsive to the data and service needs of the A-Train Cloud/Aerosol community Provide services (i.e., expertise) that will facilitate the effortless access to and usage of ATDD data Collaborate with scientists to facilitate the use of data from multiple sensors for long term atmospheric research

Orbital Debris Avoidance

Debris Avoidance A-Train missions are in a 705 km sun-synchronous polar orbit. 55 other objects reside in orbits with mean altitudes of 705 +/- 5 km, including, Terra, EO-1, Landsat-5 and -7, and six Iridium satellites. More than 1500 cataloged objects pass through this regime each day. On average, one object comes close Within 5 km of each A-Train mission each day Within 2 km of each A-Train mission once or twice a week. ESMO has a task with the DOD’s Joint Space Operations Center to screen all A-Train and Morning Constellation missions to ensure their safety.

Debris Avoidance Maneuvers During June – July 2007 Terra performed a very small maneuver on June 21 to avoid a piece of debris from the Chinese satellite, FENGYUN CloudSat performed a maneuver on July 4 to avoid an Iranian satellite The International Space Station performed a small drag make-up maneuver on July 23 to avoid a tank of ammonia which astronauts had ejected earlier

FENGYUN 1C Debris Distribution (2/15/07) Debris Environment Debris threat is increasing: ~11,000 tracked objects >1 cm2 3 collisions publicly documented, 1 near EOS regime Over 200 objects added to NORAD catalog yearly (Ref: Liou & Johnson) Chinese ASAT test using FENGYUN on January 11 added significantly more debris: 861 km orbit altitude 756 pieces of debris cataloged as of February 15, 2007 FENGYUN 1C Debris Distribution (2/15/07) Several additional breakups in February caused over 1000 additional pieces of debris (see next slide)

Orbital Debris In The News New York Times article July 31, 2007 “… The Chinese weapon test, on Jan. 11, shattered an aging weather satellite into hundreds of bits, in what space experts describe as the worst satellite fracture of the space age. “Soon after that, four more breakups added to the debris problem: On Feb. 2, a new Chinese navigation satellite suffered an apparent engine failure that left it in dozens and perhaps hundreds of pieces. “On Feb. 14, an abandoned Russian engine broke into roughly 60 detectable pieces, apparently because residual fuel had exploded. “On Feb. 18, a retired spacecraft jointly developed by China and Brazil suddenly and mysteriously broke into dozens of pieces. American experts suspect it was the victim of a collision with other space debris. “Then on Feb. 19, a large Russian space tug exploded, apparently from residual fuel, creating a cloud of about 1,000 pieces of detectable debris. “Orbital Debris Quarterly News, a NASA publication, noted that at least three of the four breakups appeared to have been preventable if more caution had been exercised in designing and operating the vehicles.” Source: New York Times, July 31, 2007 http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/31/science/space/31orbi.html?_r=1&ref=science&oref=slogin

Thank you. Questions?