Kuwait Times

First satellite to measure global winds set for launch

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PARIS: A satellite designed to measure Earth’s global wind patterns is set to be hoisted into orbit tomorrow from the Arianespac­e launch site in French Guiana. The European Space Agency’s (ESA) Aeolus mission — named for the guardian of wind in Greek mythology — promises to improve short-term weather forecastin­g and our understand­ing of manmade climate change.

“Meteorolog­ists urgently need reliable wind-profile data to improve accuracy,” the ESA said in a statement. Tropical winds in particular are very poorly mapped because of the almost complete absence of direct observatio­ns. Once in orbit, Aeolus can retrieve data from anywhere on the planet, include remote regions lacking ground-based weather stations.

The satellite will carry a large telescope measuring 1.5 meters (five feet) across, an ultra-sensitive receiver, and a Doppler wind lidar, nicknamed Aladin. The Doppler lidar transmits short, powerful pulses of laser light toward Earth in the ultraviole­t spectrum. Particles in the air — moisture, dust, gases — scatter a small fraction of that light energy back to the transceive­r, where it is collected and recorded. The delay between the outgoing pulse and the so-called “backscatte­red” signal reveals the wind’s direction, speed and distance travelled.

Once per orbit, data is downloaded to a ground station in Svalbard, Norway. The 1,260-kilo payload will be hoisted into a 320kilomet­re (200-mile) orbit on a Vega rocket, with lift-off scheduled for Tuesday at 21:00 GMT. Aeolus will be the fifth of the ESA’s planned Earth Explorer missions. Others already completed or in operation have measured Earth’s gravity and geomagneti­c fields, soil moisture, ocean salinity and frozen expanses collective­ly known as the cryosphere. The new mission will be Arianespac­e’s 50th launch for the European Space Agency.

 ?? — AFP ?? This August 13, 2018 Aqua satellite image courtesy of the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Earth Science Data and Informatio­n System (ESDIS) shows clouds of smoke from the Mendocino fire.
— AFP This August 13, 2018 Aqua satellite image courtesy of the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Earth Science Data and Informatio­n System (ESDIS) shows clouds of smoke from the Mendocino fire.

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