Send Your Name Around The Earth On NASA's Glory Mission

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Sept. 25, 2008

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

Leslie McCarthy 
Goddard Institute for Space Studies, New York 
212-678-5507 
leslie.m.mccarthy@xxxxxxxx 

Sarah DeWitt 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
202-286-0535 
sarah.l.dewitt@xxxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 08-242

SEND YOUR NAME AROUND THE EARTH ON NASA'S GLORY MISSION

WASHINGTON - Members of the public can send their names around Earth 
on NASA's Glory satellite, the first mission dedicated to 
understanding the effects of particles in the atmosphere and the 
sun's variability on our climate. 

The "Send Your Name Around the Earth" Web site enables everyone to 
take part in the science mission and place their names in orbit for 
years to come. The Web site, where participants can submit their 
information, is located at: 



http://polls.nasa.gov/utilities/sendtospace/jsp/sendName.jsp 


Participants will receive a printable certificate from NASA and have 
their name recorded on a microchip that will become part of the 
spacecraft. The deadline for submitting names is Nov. 1, 2008. 

The Glory satellite will allow scientists to measure airborne 
particles more accurately from space than ever before. The particles, 
known as "aerosols," are tiny bits of material found in Earth's 
atmosphere, like dust and smog. 

"Undoubtedly, greenhouse gases cause the biggest climatic effect," 
said Michael Mishchenko, the Glory project scientist at NASA's 
Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York. "But the uncertainty 
in the aerosol effect is the biggest uncertainty in climate at the 
present."  
Glory will carry two scientific instruments, the Aerosol Polarimetry 
Sensor, or APS, and the Total Irradiance Monitor, or TIM, and two 
cameras for cloud identification. The APS instrument will help 
quantify the role of aerosols as natural and human-produced agents of 
climate change more accurately than existing measurement tools. The 
TIM instrument will continue 30 years of measuring total solar 
irradiance, the amount of energy radiating from the sun to Earth, 
with improved accuracy and stability. Understanding the sun's energy 
is an important key to understanding climate change on Earth. 

Glory is scheduled for launch in June 2009 from Vandenberg Air Force 
Base in California. Glory will orbit as part of the Afternoon 
Constellation, or "A-Train," a series of Earth-observing satellites. 
The A-Train spacecraft follow each other in close formation, crossing 
the equator a few minutes apart shortly after 1:30 p.m. local time 
each day. The A-Train orbits Earth once every 100 minutes. 

NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., is responsible 
for Glory project management. Orbital Sciences Corporation in Dulles, 
Va., is responsible for development, integration and operations of 
the spacecraft. Raytheon in El Segundo, Calif., is responsible for 
development of the APS. The Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space 
Physics in Boulder, Colo., is responsible for the development of the 
TIM. Glory's cloud cameras were built by Ball Aerospace and 
Technologies of Boulder. 

For more information on Glory, visit: 










http://glory.gsfc.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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