Santa Cruz Sentinel

European-US sea level tracking satellite sends first readings

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PASADENA >> A newly launched European-U.S. satellite designed to continue a decades-long record of tracking global sea levels has sent back its first measuremen­ts, NASA said Thursday.

T he Sent inel- 6 Michael Freilich satellite was launched Nov. 21 from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California and controller­s spent several weeks activating instrument­s and making sure operations were normal.

The first measuremen­ts provided informatio­n on sea surface height, wave height and wind speed off the southern tip of Africa.

Josh Willis, project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a statement that “the data look fantastic.”

Named for a late NASA official who had a key role in developing space-based oceanograp­hy, the satellite’s main instrument is an extremely accurate radar altimeter that bounces energy off the sea surface.

Space- based sea level measuremen­ts have been uninterrup­ted since the 1992 launch of the U. S.-French TOPEX-Poseidon satellite.

The rate of sea level rise has doubled since then to 0.16 inch per year, almost entirely due to the combinatio­n of meltwater from land- based glaciers and ice sheets and the fact that seawater expands as it warms, NASA said.

TOPEX-Poseidon familiariz­ed the public with the concept of ocean surface topography with data turned into brightly colored graphics of the globe showing warming and cooling water marking weather-influencin­g El Nino and La Nina conditions.

TOPEX- Poseidon was followed by a series of satellites including the current Jason- 3.

Sometime this month, Sentinel- 6 will be moved higher from an initial orbit to its operationa­l orbit, where it will trail Jason-3 by 30 seconds so scientists can cross-check the data to ensure continuity. When that is assured, Sentinel- 6 will become the primary satellite.

 ?? DAVID MIDDLECAMP — SAN LUIS OBISPO TRIBUNE ?? A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying a U.S.-European satellite lifts off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Nov. 21.
DAVID MIDDLECAMP — SAN LUIS OBISPO TRIBUNE A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying a U.S.-European satellite lifts off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Nov. 21.

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