NASA: Weather 'Eye in the Sky' Marks 10 Years - 2012
Posted by Ricardo Marcenaro | Posted in NASA: Weather 'Eye in the Sky' Marks 10 Years - 2012 | Posted on 13:40
A NASA Weather 'Eye in the Sky' Marks 10 Years
05.03.12
› Full image and caption
For 10 years, it has silently swooped through space in its orbital perch
438 miles (705 kilometers) above Earth, its nearly 2,400 spectral
"eyes" peering into Earth's atmosphere, watching. But there's nothing
alien about NASA's Atmospheric Infrared Sounder, or AIRS, instrument, a
"monster" of weather and climate research that celebrates its 10th
birthday in orbit May 4.
AIRS, built by BAE Systems, Boston, under the direction of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., is one of six instruments
flying on NASA's Aqua spacecraft as part of NASA's Earth Observing
System. AIRS, along with its partner microwave instrument, the Advanced
Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU-A), has faithfully measured our planet's
atmospheric temperature, water vapor, clouds and greenhouse gases with
unprecedented accuracy and stability. Over the past decade, AIRS and
AMSU-A have improved our understanding of Earth's global water and
energy cycles, climate change and trends and how Earth's climate system
is responding to increased greenhouse gases.
Studies have shown AIRS has improved global weather prediction more than
any other single satellite instrument in the past 10 years. In 2006, a
group led by John Le Marshall of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration demonstrated that use of AIRS data in weather forecasting
models significantly improved forecast "skill" -- the name of the
calculation meteorologists use to quantify how close a forecast is to
actual observed weather conditions.
"AIRS has performed beyond expectation, exceeding its mission
objectives," said AIRS Project Manager Tom Pagano of JPL. "The knowledge
we've gained through AIRS has advanced our understanding of weather and
climate, and demonstrated an important measurement technology. While
the team can be proud of what's been accomplished, we continue to look
forward to new discoveries as we explore the connection between extreme
weather and climate change."
AIRS was the brainchild of the late Moustafa Chahine, the AIRS science
team leader at JPL who also served as JPL's chief scientist for many
years. In the 1970s, Chahine had the idea of improving weather
forecasting by using thousands of infrared channels to better discern
temperature and water vapor variations in Earth's atmosphere, a
technique known as hyperspectral sounding.
As the first of a series of hyperspectral sounders for weather
forecasting, AIRS has been a trailblazer for understanding and
assimilating hyperspectral data. The current generation of European
meteorological satellites now host an AIRS-like sounder, the Infrared
Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer; while a similar instrument, the
Cross-track Infrared Sounder, now flies aboard NASA's new Suomi NPP
satellite, the forerunner of the next-generation of U.S. weather
satellites.
One of the most significant scientific results from AIRS has been
quantification of what's called the water vapor feedback effect. "As
Earth's surface warms and the atmosphere with it, the atmosphere can
hold a little more water vapor," said AIRS Project Scientist Eric
Fetzer. "Water vapor is itself a greenhouse gas—it traps heat the same
way carbon dioxide does. So if there's a slight warming, there will be a
slight increase in water vapor, and that water vapor itself will cause a
continuing increase." This vicious circle of warming is known as a
positive feedback, an idea well-rooted in physical theory dating back to
the 19th century.
A team led by Andrew Dessler of Texas A&M University, College
Station, tested the theory using AIRS' humidity data. AIRS could
quantify the amount of water vapor at different levels of the atmosphere
globally, permitting them to derive the average strength of the water
vapor feedback across the globe. He found the water vapor feedback is
extraordinarily strong, capable of doubling the warming due to carbon
dioxide alone.
Another important AIRS result is development of data products that
quantify the global amount of several key atmospheric trace gases,
including carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and methane. AIRS produced the
first global map from space of carbon dioxide in Earth's
mid-troposphere, revealing greater-than-expected variations, the
transport of carbon dioxide across the equator and a "belt" of
higher-than-average concentrations in the mid-latitudes of the Southern
Hemisphere.
The AIRS team plans even more new products, some of which will help them
better understand the physical properties of clouds. Knowing these
properties is critical for understanding clouds, considered one of the
largest remaining uncertainties in climate science.
In the meantime, AIRS continues to operate well and is expected to last
until Aqua runs out of fuel in 2022. More than 10,000 users worldwide
currently use AIRS data for weather prediction and for conducting
research into climate processes, atmospheric composition and
environmental conditions that affect human health.
For more information on AIRS, visit:
http://airs.jpl.nasa.gov/news_archive/2012-05-04-AIRS-Science-at-10-Years/ and http://airs.jpl.nasa.gov/ . For more on Aqua, see: http://aqua.nasa.gov/ .
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Alan.buis@jpl.nasa.gov
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NASA: Weather 'Eye in the Sky' Marks 10 Years - 2012
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