SpaceX rocket launches world's first global water survey mission
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[December 16, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES, Calif. (Reuters) - A SpaceX rocket blasted off early on
Friday carrying a U.S.-French satellite designed to conduct the first
global survey of Earth's surface waters, a mission expected to shed new
light on the mechanics and consequences of climate change.
The Falcon 9 booster owned and operated by Elon Musk's commercial rocket
company lit up the predawn sky along California's coast as it roared off
its launch pad shortly before 4 a.m. PST (1200 GMT) at the Vandenberg
U.S. Space Force Base.
The liftoff, directed by a NASA team, was shown live on a U.S. space
agency webcast.
The upper stage of the two-stage rocket was expected to reach its
initial orbit about 530 miles (850 km) above Earth within minutes.
Its payload, the Surface Water and Ocean Topography satellite, or SWOT,
incorporates advanced microwave radar technology to collect
high-definition measurements of oceans, lakes, reservoirs and rivers
over 90% of the globe.
The data, compiled from radar sweeps at least twice every 21 days, will
be used to enhance ocean-circulation models, bolster weather and climate
forecasts and aid in managing freshwater supplies in drought-stricken
regions, researchers say.
Components of the SUV-sized satellite were built primarily by NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and French space agency CNES.
Nearly 20 years in development by the U.S. space agency with
contributions from counterparts in Canada and Britain, SWOT was one of
15 missions listed by the National Research Council as projects NASA
should undertake in the coming decade.
CLIMATE TIPPING POINT?
One major thrust of the mission is to explore how oceans absorb
atmospheric heat and carbon dioxide, in a process that naturally
regulates global temperatures and has helped to minimize climate change.
Oceans have absorbed more than 90% of the excess heat trapped in Earth's
atmosphere by human-caused greenhouse gas emissions, scientists
estimate.
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The Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT)
radar satellite spacecraft is moved into a transport container
inside the Astrotech facility at Vandenberg Space Force Base in
California, U.S. November 18, 2022. USSF/Chris Okula/Handout via
REUTERS.
Scanning the seas from orbit, SWOT will be able to measure fine
differences in surface elevations around the smaller currents and
eddies where much the oceans' drawdown of heat and carbon is
believed to occur.
Understanding that mechanism will help answer a pivotal question -
what is the tipping point at which oceans start releasing, rather
than absorbing, large amounts of heat back to the atmosphere, thus
intensifying global warming instead of limiting it.
SWOT's ability to discern smaller surface features also will help
study the impacts of rising ocean levels on coastal areas.
Freshwater bodies are another key focus of SWOT, equipped to observe
the entire length of nearly all rivers wider than 330 feet (100
meters), as well as more than 1 million lakes and reservoirs larger
than a few New York City blocks.
Taking inventory of Earth's water resources repeatedly over SWOT's
three-year mission will enable researchers to better trace
fluctuations in the planet's rivers and lakes during seasonal
changes and major weather events.
SWOT's radar instrument operates at the Ka-band frequency of the
microwave spectrum, allowing its scans to penetrate cloud cover and
darkness and map observations in two dimensions.
Previous studies of water bodies relied on data taken at specific
points or from satellites that could only track measurements along a
one-dimensional line.
The satellite is expected to begin producing research data within
months.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Lisa Shumaker
and John Stonestreet)
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