Alan Buis 818-354-0474
NEWS RELEASE: 2008-085 May 27, 2008 NASA Satellites Illuminate Pollution's Influence on Clouds, Climate Jonathan Jiang of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, "The A-Train is providing a new way to examine cloud types," said Mark Schoeberl, A-Train project scientist at NASA's Discovery of the link between rain and pollution was possible due to near-simultaneous measurements from the A-Train satellites. "Typically, it is very hard to get a sense of how important the effect of pollution on clouds is," said Anne Douglass, deputy project scientist at Goddard for NASA's Aura satellite. "With the A-Train, we can see the clouds every day and we're getting confirmation on a global scale that we have an issue here." Jiang's team used the JPL-developed and managed Microwave Limb Sounder on the A-Train's Aura satellite to measure the level of carbon monoxide in clouds. The presence of carbon monoxide implies the presence of smoke and other aerosols, which usually come from the same emission source, such a power plant or agricultural fire. With the ability to distinguish between polluted and clean clouds, the team next used Aqua's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer to study how ice particle sizes change when aerosol pollution is present in the clouds. The team also used NASA's Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission satellite to measure the amount of precipitation falling from the polluted and clean clouds. All three measurements together show the relationship between pollution, clouds and precipitation. The team found that polluted clouds suppressed rainfall during the June-to-October dry season in This trend turned up seasonal and regional differences, however, and aerosol pollution was found, on average, to be less of a factor during the wet monsoon seasons in South America and in "The complexity of interactions between aerosols and clouds poses difficult problems that no one satellite instrument can solve," said Jiang. "But when you put parameters from multiple satellites all together, you will find much more information than from a single instrument alone." The five satellites of the A-Train -- NASA's Aqua, Aura, CloudSat, Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (Calipso) and the French Space Agency's Polarization and Anisotropy of Reflectances for Atmospheric Sciences coupled with Observations from a Lidar, or Parasol -- orbit only eight minutes apart and can be thought of as an extended satellite observatory, providing unprecedented information about clouds, aerosols and atmospheric composition. For information about NASA and agency programs, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/home . For information about the Microwave Limb Sounder on Aura, visit: http://mls.jpl.nasa.gov/ . JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology in
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