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May 17, 2004 - (date of web publication)

NASA Plans to put an Aura Around the Earth

Aura satellite - artist's concept

Item 1
Click on image to enlarge

On June 19, NASA will launch Aura, a next generation Earth-observing satellite. Aura will supply the best information yet about the health of Earth's atmosphere.

Aura will help scientists understand how atmospheric composition affects and responds to Earth's changing climate. The satellite will help reveal the processes that connect local and global air quality. It will also track the extent Earth's protective ozone layer is recovering.

Aura will carry four instruments each designed to survey different aspects of Earth's atmosphere. The instruments will provide an unprecedented and complete picture of the composition of the atmosphere. Aura will survey the atmosphere from the troposphere, where mankind lives, through the stratosphere, where the ozone layer resides and protects life on Earth.
Haze over U.S. from Canadian fires.

TOMS image of the Canadian fires.

Item 2
Click on images to enlarge.

Aura's space-based view of the atmosphere and its chemistry will complete the first series of NASA's Earth Observing System satellites. The other satellites are, Terra, which monitors land, and Aqua, which observes Earth's water cycle.

"Gaining this global view of Earth will certainly reap new scientific discoveries that will serve as essential stepping stones to our further exploration of the Moon, Mars and beyond - the basis of the Vision for Space Exploration," said NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe.

Ozone hole September 2003 color bar for the ozone hole image

Item 3
Click on image to enlarge.

Aura will help answer key scientific questions, including whether the ozone layer is recovering. Aura data may prove useful determing the effectiveness of international agreements, which banned ozone-depleting chemicals like chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs).

Aura will accurately detect global levels of CFCs, and their byproducts, chlorine and bromine, which destroy ozone. Aura will also track the sources and processes controlling global and regional air quality. It will help distinguish between natural and human-caused sources of these gases. When ozone exists in the troposphere, it acts as an air pollutant. Tropospheric ozone is linked to high levels of precursors such as nitrogen dioxide, carbon monoxide and volatile hydrocarbons. Aura will help scientists follow the sources of tropospheric ozone and its precursors.

  Ozone holes over the years

Item 4
Click on image to enlarge.

"Aura, the first comprehensive laboratory in space to help us better understand the chemistry and composition of the Earth's atmosphere, is fundamentally a mission to understand and protect the very air we breathe, " said NASA Associate Administrator for Earth Science Dr. Ghassem Asrar. "It is also a perfect complement to our other Earth Observing System satellites that, together, will aid our nation and our neighbors by determining the extent, causes, and regional consequences of global change."

  The image shows aerosols crossing the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

Item 5

As the composition of Earth's atmosphere changes, so does its ability to absorb, reflect and retain solar energy. Greenhouse gases, including water vapor, trap heat in the atmosphere. Airborne aerosols from human and natural sources absorb or reflect solar energy based on color, shape, size, and substance. The impact of aerosols, tropospheric ozone and upper tropospheric water vapor on Earth's climate remains largely unquantified. Aura's ability to monitor these agents will help unravel some of their mystery.

Aura's four instruments, the High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder (HIRDLS); the Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS); the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI); and the Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES) will work together to provide measurements in the troposphere and stratosphere to help answer important climate questions.

 

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HIRDLS was built by the United Kingdom and the United States. OMI was built by the Netherlands and Finland in collaboration with NASA. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., constructed TES and MLS. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., manages the Aura mission.

NASA's Earth Science Enterprise is dedicated to understanding the Earth as an integrated system and applying Earth System Science to improve prediction of climate, weather, and natural hazards using the unique vantage point of space.

More visualizations, including those produced by the Scientific Visualization Studio, are available here.

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For more information contact:

Gretchen Cook-Anderson
Headquarters, Washington
(Phone: 202/358-0836)

Lynn Chandler/Krishna Ramanujan
at AGU
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(Phone: 301/286-2806; AGU Press Room: 514/871-5822)

For more information about Aura and its Instruments:

Video Resource Page
AURA Website
AURA Instruments Page

For more information about NASA's Earth Science Enterprise, visit:
http://www.earth.nasa.gov

For the Aura Science Writer's Guide in PDF format, click here.

Caption for Item 1:

Aura satellite - artist's concept.

High Resolution image

Caption for Item 2:

Smoke from multiple large wildfires in Canada blanketed the Great Lakes and eastern United States. The enormous smoke plume was almost 200 miles wide. The thick pall affected air quality from New York, to Baltimore, and Washington, D.C. and blocked the sunlight cooling the East Coast. The left image was taken by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on the Terra satellite on July 7, 2002. The right image comes from NASA's Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) on the Earth Probe satellite. Highest aerosol concentration is in red.

High resolution of Canada fires image

High resolution of TOMS image

Caption for Item 3:

The Antarctic ozone hole of 2003
was the second largest ever observed. The dark blue indicates the region of maximum ozone depletion.

High resolution of image

Caption of Item 4:

TOMS images show the growth of the ozone hole over 20 years.

High resolution of image

Caption for Item 5:

Aerosols affect climate both directly by reflecting and absorbing sunlight and indirectly by modifying clouds. The TOMS aerosol index is an indicator of smoke and dust absorption. The image shows aerosols crossing the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Dust from the Sahara desert is carried westward toward the Americas. Asian dust and
pollution travel to the Pacific Northwest.

High resolution image

Caption for Item 6: Aura Satellite

This is a photograph of the Aura satellite in the clean room prior to launch. Credit: Northrop Grumman

High resolution image

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