NASA Co-Sponsors Ocean Voyage to Probe Climate-Relevant Gases

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Feb. 21, 2008

Stephen Cole
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0918
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Jana Goldman
NOAA Research, Silver Spring, Md.
301-734-1123
jana.Goldman@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-063

NASA CO-SPONSORS OCEAN VOYAGE TO PROBE CLIMATE-RELEVANT GASES

WASHINGTON - More than 30 scientists will embark next week on a 
research mission to the Southern Ocean. Researchers will battle the 
elements to study how gases important to climate change move between 
the atmosphere and the ocean under high winds and seas. 

NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and 
the National Science Foundation are sponsoring the Southern Ocean Gas 
Exchange Experiment, a six-week research expedition aboard the NOAA 
ship Ronald H. Brown, departing Feb. 28 from Punta Arenas, Chile. The 
Ronald H. Brown is a state-of-the-art oceanographic research platform 
and the largest research vessel in the NOAA fleet.

Scientists from dozens of universities and research institutions plan 
to measure turbulence, waves, bubbles, temperature and ocean color, 
and investigate how these factors relate to the air-sea exchange of 
carbon dioxide and other climate-relevant gases. The research will 
help improve the accuracy of climate models and predictions. 

The world's oceans are estimated to absorb about 2 billion metric tons 
of carbon from the atmosphere every year, which is about 30 percent 
of the total annual global emissions of carbon dioxide. Scientists 
know higher wind speeds promote faster exchange of gases, but there 
have been very few studies aimed at directly measuring these 
exchanges under real world conditions where other factors, such as 
breaking waves, can influence the process.

"NASA's ongoing effort to understand the global carbon cycle will 
benefit from the data this cruise will produce about the mechanisms 
that govern gas transfer in this remote part of the world's ocean," 
said Paula Bontempi, manager of NASA's ocean biology and 
biogeochemistry research program at NASA Headquarters in Washington. 
"NASA's global satellite observations of ocean color that reveal so 
much about the health of our oceans also will be improved in this 
region as we validate what our space-based sensors see with direct 
measurements taken at sea."

NASA's Aqua satellite makes ocean color observations over the Southern 
Ocean every few days with the Moderate Resolution Imaging 
Spectroradiometer. The satellite, launched in 2002, uses six 
instruments to make global measurements of the atmosphere, land, 
oceans, and snow and ice cover.

The Southern Ocean covers a vast area and has some of the roughest 
seas on Earth. 

"It is the largest ocean region where the surface waters directly 
connect to the ocean interior, providing a pathway into the deep sea 
for carbon dioxide released from human activities," said Christopher 
Sabine, an oceanographer at NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental 
Laboratory, Seattle, and co-chief scientist on the cruise. 
"Understanding how atmospheric carbon dioxide is absorbed into these 
cold surface waters under high winds speeds is important for 
determining how the ocean uptake of carbon dioxide will respond to 
future climate change."

"We will be directly assessing the rate and mechanism by which the 
ocean is taking up carbon and releasing it," said cruise co-chief 
scientist David Ho of Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia 
University, Palisades, N.Y. "This is the first U.S.-led effort to use 
all the state-of-the-art tools that we have to quantify gas exchange 
in the Southern Ocean. After years of planning, it is extremely 
satisfying to see the experiment finally take place."

For more information on the experiment on the Web, visit:

http://so-gasex.org

For information about NASA and agency programs on the Web, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/home

	
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