NOAA's latest weather and fire-tracking satellite launched to orbit
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[March 05, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - An Atlas V rocket blasted off
from Florida on Tuesday carrying to orbit the next big satellite
designed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
to provide round-the-clock tracking of weather, wildfires and climate
change over Earth's western hemisphere.
The GOES-T spacecraft is the third in the latest series of advanced
geostationary satellites, credited with revolutionizing real-time
weather forecasting, environmental monitoring and hazard detections from
space.
The GOES program - short for Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellites - is a collaboration between NOAA and NASA.
The latest satellite will be renamed GOES-18 once it reaches operational
orbit some 22,000 miles (35,000 km) over the equator, joining
predecessors GOES-16 and GOES-17. They were launched in 2016 and 2018,
respectively.
The geosynchronous orbits of the GOES satellites match the rotational
speed of the Earth, keeping them in a constant position relative to the
planet's surface.
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GOES-18 will replace GOES-17 in the
western position, to keep watch over the western contiguous United
States, Alaska, Hawaii, Mexico, Central America and the Pacific
Ocean, according to NASA.
GOES-17's operations were stunted by a faulty cooling system on its
main imaging instrument, but it is still partly functional. GOES-16
will remain stationed over the eastern portion of the hemisphere.
GOES-T was lofted to its preliminary orbit on Tuesday aboard an
Atlas V 541 rocket flown by United Launch Alliance, a joint venture
of Boeing Co and Lockheed Martin Corp, from the Cape Canaveral U.S.
Space Force Base in Florida.
Once in final position, GOES-18 will be used to track not just
weather but wildfires - one of its most important capabilities for
the western United States - as well as flash floods, dust storms,
fog and landslides.
The satellite also is equipped to monitor geomagnetic storms
triggered by bursts of solar activity, as well as oceanography and
climate change.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Kenneth
Maxwell)
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