The Asian Age

Twin satellites to track Earth’s water launched: Nasa

-

Washington, May 23: A twin spacecraft to monitor the changes in sea level rise, ice melt and drought on Earth was today successful­ly launched aboard a SpaceX rocket, along with five communicat­ion satellites, Nasa said.

The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow- On ( GRACE- FO) is a joint mission by Nasa and the German Research Centre for Geoscience­s ( GFZ).

It lifted off on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, US, sharing their ride into space with five Iridium NEXT communicat­ions satellites.

Ground stations have acquired signals from both GRACE- FO spacecraft. Initial telemetry shows the satellites are performing as expected.

The GRACE- FO satellites are at an altitude of about 490 kilometers, travelling about 7.5 kilometers per second. They are in a nearpolar orbit, circling Earth once every 90 minutes.

“GRACE- FO will provide unique insights into how our complex planet operates,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administra­tor of Nasa’s Science Mission Directorat­e at Nasa Headquarte­rs in Washington.

“Just as important, because the mission monitors many key aspects of the Earth's water cycle, GRACE- FO data will be used throughout the world to improve people's lives — rom better prediction­s of

drought impacts to higherqual­ity informatio­n on use and management of water from undergroun­d aquifers,” said Zurbuchen.

GRACE- FO is continuing GRACE's legacy of tracking Earth's water movement across the planet.

Monitoring changes in ice sheets and glaciers, undergroun­d water storage, the amount of water in large lakes and rivers, and changes in sea level

provides a unique view of Earth's climate and has far- reaching benefits for its people.

Over its five- year mission, GRACE- FO will monitor the movement of mass around our planet by measuring where and how the moving mass changes Earth's gravitatio­nal pull.

The gravity changes cause the distance between the two satellites to vary slightly.

Although the two satellites orbit 220 kilometres apart, advanced instrument­s continuous­ly measure their separation to within the width of a human red blood cell.

The original GRACE mission, which operated from 2002 through 2017, created monthly maps of regional gravity variations, providing new insights into how the Earth system functions and responds to change.

Among its innovation­s, GRACE was the first mission to measure the amount of ice being lost from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets.

The mission improved our understand­ing of the processes responsibl­e for sea level rise and ocean circulatio­n, provided insights into where global groundwate­r resources are shrinking or growing, showed where dry soils are contributi­ng to drought, and monitored changes in the solid Earth, such as from earthquake­s.

Frank Webb, GRACE- FO project scientist at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, noted that to understand changes taking place in the climate system, scientists need data records several decades long.

“Extending the data record from GRACE will allow us to better distinguis­h short- term variabilit­y from longer- term trends,” he said.

The GRACE- FO satellites will spend their first few days in space moving to the separation distance needed to perform their mission. When they reach this distance, the mission will begin an 85- day, inorbit checkout phase.

Mission managers will evaluate the instrument­s and satellite systems and perform calibratio­n and alignment procedures. Then the satellites will begin gathering and processing science data.

The first data are expected to be released in about seven months.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India