Joint NASA-French Satellite to Track Trends in Sea Level, Climate

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May 20, 2008

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

RELEASE: 08-132

JOINT NASA-FRENCH SATELLITE TO TRACK TRENDS IN SEA LEVEL, CLIMATE

WASHINGTON -- A satellite that will help scientists better monitor and 
understand rises in global sea level, study the world's ocean 
circulation and its links to Earth's climate, and improve weather and 
climate forecasts, is undergoing final preparations for a June 15 
launch from California's Vandenberg Air Force Base.

The Ocean Surface Topography Mission (OSTM)/Jason 2 is a partnership 
of NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), 
the French Space Agency Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES) and 
the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological 
Satellites (EUMETSAT). The mission will extend into the next decade 
the continuous record of sea-surface height measurements started in 
1992 by the NASA-CNES TOPEX/Poseidon mission and extended by the 
NASA-CNES Jason 1 mission in 2001. 

The satellite will continue monitoring trends in sea-level rise, one 
of the most important consequences and indicators of global climate 
change. Measurements from TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason 1 have shown that 
mean sea level has risen by about 0.12 inches a year since 1993, 
twice the rate estimated from tide gauges in the past century. But 15 
years of data are not sufficient to determine long-term trends. 

"OSTM/Jason 2 will help create the first multi-decadal global record 
for understanding the vital roles of the ocean in climate change," 
said OSTM/Jason 2 project scientist Lee-Lueng Fu of NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "Data from the new mission 
will allow us to continue monitoring global sea-level change, a field 
of study where current predictive models have a large degree of 
uncertainty."

Developed and proven through the joint efforts of NASA and CNES, 
high-precision ocean altimetry measures the height of the sea surface 
relative to Earth's center to within about 1.3 inches. These 
measurements, also known as ocean surface topography, provide 
information on the speed and direction of ocean currents. Because sea 
surface height is strongly influenced by the amount of heat in the 
ocean, it also is an indicator of ocean heat storage in most places. 
Combining ocean current and heat storage data is key to understanding 
global climate variations.

OSTM/Jason 2 marks the transition of high-precision altimetry data 
collection to the world's weather and climate forecasting agencies. 
Scientists soon will be able to forecast how ocean circulation will 
change from one season to the next and how that circulation is linked 
to climate change and weather patterns.

"What began as an investment by NASA and CNES in research tools for 
studying the ocean has matured into a proven technique that will now 
be routinely used by the world's weather and climate agencies to make 
better forecasts," said Michael Freilich, director of the Earth 
Science Division in NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. 
"People in coastal areas will benefit from improved near-real-time 
data on ocean conditions, while people everywhere will benefit from 
better seasonal predictions resulting from the increased 
understanding of Earth system processes enabled by these 
measurements."

OSTM/Jason 2 will ride to space aboard a NASA-provided United Launch 
Alliance Delta II rocket, entering orbit about six to nine miles 
below Jason 1's 830-mile-high orbit. OSTM/Jason 2 will use its 
thrusters to raise itself into the same orbital altitude as Jason 1 
and move in close behind its predecessor. 

The two spacecraft will fly in formation, making nearly simultaneous 
measurements. For the six to nine months after launch, scientists 
will verify the instruments are calibrated precisely. OSTM/Jason 2 
then will continue Jason 1's former flight path, and Jason 1 will 
move into a parallel ground track midway between two OSTM/Jason 2 
ground tracks. This tandem mission will double the amount of data 
collected, further improving tide models in coastal and shallow seas, 
and helping researchers better understand ocean currents and eddies. 
OSTM/Jason 2's mission is designed to last at least three years.

The CNES-provided OSTM/Jason 2 spacecraft carries five primary 
instruments similar to those on Jason 1. Its main instrument is the 
CNES-provided Poseidon 3 altimeter. NASA's Advanced Microwave 
Radiometer measures atmospheric water vapor, which can distort the 
altimeter measurements. Three location systems combine to precisely 
measure the satellite's position in orbit: NASA's Laser 
Retroreflector Array and Global Positioning System payload, and CNES' 
Doppler Orbitography and Radio-positioning Integrated by Satellite 
instrument. Instrument improvements since Jason 1 will allow 
scientists to monitor ocean coastal regions with increased accuracy, 
nearly 50 percent closer than in the past. Three experimental 
instruments round out the payload: CNES' Environment Characterization 
and Modelisation-2 and Time Transfer by Laser Link, and Japan's Light 
Particle Telescope.

JPL manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate. After 
on-orbit spacecraft commissioning, CNES will hand over mission 
operations and control to NOAA. NOAA and EUMETSAT will generate, 
archive and distribute data products.

For more on OSTM/Jason 2 on the Web, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/ostm

	
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