Satellite Successfully Observes Polar Mesospheric Clouds
Posted on: Thursday, 13 November 2008, 14:28 CST
The Naval Research Laboratory's Spatial Heterodyne Imager for Mesospheric Radicals (SHIMMER) has successfully observed a second northern season of Polar Mesospheric Clouds (PMCs), which are the Earth's highest clouds. This successful observation fulfills the primary goal of the Space Test Program Satellite-1 (STPSat-1) Extended Mission.
SHIMMER was originally launched as the primary payload of STPSat-1 on March 8, 2007, with the objective to demonstrate the novel optical technique of Spatial Heterodyne Spectroscopy and to obtain global measurements of the hydroxyl (OH) radical in the Earth's mesosphere (50-90 km altitude). After the successful completion of its nominal 1-year mission, STPSat-1 operations were transitioned to NRL, which has been operating the spacecraft since June 1, 2008 using a novel, low cost operations approach.
The primary objective of the SHIMMER Extended Mission was to continue global scale PMC observations during the northern PMC season, which ended in August 2008. PMCs form in a thin layer in summer near 82 km over polar latitudes. Some have argued that, due to increases in atmospheric humidity, cloud occurrences have been increasing in recent decades. Because STPSat-1 is in a relatively low inclination orbit, SHIMMER observes PMCs at their equator-ward edge (<58°), but more importantly, makes measurements at a wide range of local times. This ability for SHIMMER to make measurements of the variation of PMCs throughout the day is unique among the several satellites that have observed PMCs, explains Dr. Christoph R. Englert, principal investigator of SHIMMER.
SHIMMER has now measured the PMC diurnal variation for the two northern seasons of 2007 and 2008, and surprisingly, the variation is quite different. Even though a semidiurnal signature, that is two peaks per day -- one in early morning and one in the late afternoon -- was observed in 2007; in 2008, the variation was diurnal or one peak per day (see figure). This result has important implications for the inference of long-term trends from historical, space-based PMC observations because NASA and NOAA satellites that have observed PMCs over the last 25 years have all been launched into sun-synchronous orbits with different, fixed local times. Until the diurnal variation of these clouds is better understood, the SHIMMER data show that it is premature to make firm conclusions about multi-decadal trends in PMCs.
SHIMMER is a compact, rugged, high-resolution ultraviolet spectrometer designed to image the Earth's atmosphere. It is the first satellite-based instrument to use the spatial heterodyne spectroscopy (SHS) technique, which significantly reduces the instrument's size and weight while retaining the spectral resolution and exceeding the sensitivity of comparable conventional instrumentation. The heart of SHIMMER is a monolithic interferometer, which allows SHIMMER to simultaneously observe the OH solar resonance fluorescence from 32 altitudes at a superior resolving power of 25,000. NRL's Space Science Division developed SHIMMER in cooperation with St. Cloud State University and the University of Wisconsin. NASA's Planetary Instrument Definition and Development Program supported the development of the monolithic interferometer.
---
Image 1: Polar mesospheric cloud over Lake Saimaa. Courtesy Mika Yrjölä - Wikipedia
Image 2: STPSat-1 (NRL)
---
On the Net:
Source: redOrbit Staff & Wire Reports
Related Articles
- PMC-Sierra Expands WiMAX RF IC Solutions With New Multi-Band Devices for Global Spectrum Coverage
- PMC-Sierra Announces Second-Generation GPON Devices for Worldwide Fiber To The Home Deployments
- PMC-Sierra Announces Industry's First Demonstration of 10G EPON for Next-Generation Fiber to the Home
- PMC-Sierra Introduces Industry's First 10G EPON Reference Designs for FTTH Deployments
- PMC-Sierra Introduces Controller-Based Encryption Product Family for Secure Enterprise Storage
- PMC-Sierra Introduces Family of Carrier-Grade Multi-Service Residential Gateway Reference Platforms for Triple Play Services
- PMC-Sierra and ZTE Demonstrate Interoperability Between ZTE GPON OLT and PMC-Sierra GPON ONT Reference Designs
- PMC-Sierra Introduces First End-to-End EPON Silicon Solution With Key China Telecom Features
- PMC-Sierra Introduces Industry's Highest Density 32-Channel Line Interface Unit Device For T1/E1/J1 Applications
- Upcoming PMC-Sierra Webinar: ``Why Use MIPS?''
User Comments (0)



RSS Feeds