The first satellite devoted
to measuring greenhouse gases in Earth's atmosphere arrived in space Friday
after launching from an island spaceport in southwestern Japan.
The Greenhouse Gases
Observing Satellite, or GOSAT, was deployed from the upper stage of an H-2A
rocket about 16 minutes after blastoff, according to the Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency.
GOSAT is also nicknamed
Ibuki, which means "breath" in Japanese. Scientists say greenhouse
gases are akin to the Earth's breath.
Greenhouse gases are
produced by natural and human sources, including geological activity,
biological activity and the burning of fossil fuels.
Scientists believe
greenhouse gases trapped in Earth's atmosphere are responsible for rising global
temperatures. Carbon gases can trap heat that would normally radiate into
space, driving up the planet's average temperature, according to climate researchers.
That was the primary
impetus behind the development of the $206 million mission.
"GOSAT is designed to
observe the global distribution of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and
methane, from space. I am convinced and excited that GOSAT will play an
important role in the understanding of global warming," said Takashi
Hamazaki, GOSAT project manager at JAXA.
GOSAT launched aboard an
H-2A rocket from the Yoshinobu complex on Tanegashima Island at the
southwestern tip of Japan. A hydrogen-fueled main engine and twin solid motors
boosted the 174-foot-tall rocket off the launch pad at 0354 GMT (12:54 p.m.
Japanese time) Friday.
The flight was delayed two
days because of forecasted bad weather. The launch team battled thick clouds,
rainy weather and cold temperatures all week, but meteorologists cleared the
rocket for liftoff Friday despite gusty winds and rain showers.
The first stage's LE-7A
main engine propelled the orange and white rocket to an altitude of 185 miles
in the first six-and-a-half minutes of the mission. The second stage fired for
more than eight minutes, honing in on a circular orbit about 425 miles high.
The upper stage was
programmed to release seven other smaller payloads at four-minute intervals
following the separation of GOSAT.
The largest secondary
payload was a small demonstration satellite named SDS 1. The 220-pound craft
carries experimental communications equipment, a developmental data processing
chip and new computer components.
Other small satellites
aboard the rocket included a collection of Japanese educational, experimental
and scientific missions. They will observe lightning, measure gamma rays
emitted from Earth, test space tethers, demonstrate a new remote sensing
telescope, conduct trials of a laser ignition thruster, and help connect
students with space.
The satellites, including
GOSAT, are circling the planet in a sun-synchronous orbit with an inclination
of about 98 degrees.
GOSAT will begin collecting
science data this spring after controllers activate and test the spacecraft's
systems and science payload. The satellite's five-year operational mission is
scheduled to begin within six months after launch.
The satellite was
commissioned by JAXA, the National Institute for Environmental Studies and the
Japanese Ministry of the Environment.
"Several organizations
conduct atmospheric, oceanic and terrestrial monitoring of greenhouse gases. To
enhance these opportunities, various ministries and institutions launched a
Japanese alliance for climate change observation," said Yasuhiro Sasano,
director of the Center for Global Environmental Research at Japan's National
Institute for Environmental Studies.
GOSAT's primary objective
is to identify sources of atmospheric carbon dioxide and methane, partly to
monitor international compliance with the Kyoto Protocol.
The Kyoto Protocol is an
agreement between 37 industrialized countries and Europe to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions by an average of five percent, compared to 1990 levels, by 2012.
The protocol was adopted in 1997 and became binding in 2005.
GOSAT's measurements will
locate areas with high greenhouse gas emission and absorption rates. The
satellite will also track clouds of carbon dioxide spread across the globe by
wind patterns.
The satellite's primary
instrument consists of two sensors: an infrared spectrometer and a cloud and
aerosol imager.
The spectrometer will
observe infrared rays of sunlight reflected from Earth back into space. The
sensor will look for the chemical signatures of carbon dioxide and methane in
the light to build a map of their worldwide concentrations.
GOSAT's imager will account
for clouds and aerosols than can produce measurement errors.
The instrument package,
called TANSO, will collect 56,000 data points of greenhouse gas densities every
three days.
Scientists now rely on less
than 300 observation posts on the ground, ships, or aircraft to gather
information on greenhouse gases. Most of those locations are in Europe.
Japan plans to share data
from GOSAT with other nations, and officials hope to begin distributing
greenhouse gas maps by 2010.
The maps will be
constructed in large sub-continental blocks depicting the regional emission and
absorption rates by both human and natural sources.
Japanese scientists are
eager to partner with U.S. researchers leading the Orbiting Carbon Observatory
mission, which is scheduled to launch next month aboard a Taurus rocket from
Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif.
Scientists from both
missions have been working together since 2004, said David Crisp, OCO's
principal investigator.
The GOSAT and OCO teams
worked to build a common ground validation network to help combine data from
the missions. The satellites will also fly in similar orbits to observe the same
locations at nearly the same time, officials said.
"This is particularly
important for this measurement because these two satellites will be making a
measurement that must be about three times more precise than other trace gas
measurements made from space," Crisp said.
The cross-calibration
between OCO and GOSAT will improve confidence that both satellites are making
accurate measurements.
OCO's spectrometer will
provide greater sensitivity on carbon dioxide measurements but is unable to
detect methane. GOSAT's orbit is designed to bring the satellite over the same
location more often, allowing the craft's lower resolution instrument to create
a new global map every three days.
"Together, OCO and
GOSAT provide independent measurements that will help scientists better
understand this important greenhouse gas and its impacts on our present and
future climate," Crisp said.
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