NASA'S Carbon-Sniffing Satellite Sleuth Arrives at Launch Site

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Nov. 12, 2008

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

Alan Buis 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
818-354-0474 
alan.buis@xxxxxxxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 08-285

NASA'S CARBON-SNIFFING SATELLITE SLEUTH ARRIVES AT LAUNCH SITE

WASHINGTON -- NASA's first spacecraft dedicated to studying carbon 
dioxide, the leading human-produced greenhouse gas driving changes in 
Earth's climate, has arrived at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., to 
begin final launch preparations. 

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory arrived Nov. 11 at its launch site on 
California's central coast after completing a cross-country trip by 
truck from its manufacturer, Orbital Sciences Corp. in Dulles, Va. 
The spacecraft left Orbital on Nov. 8. After final tests, the 
spacecraft will be integrated onto an Orbital Sciences Taurus rocket 
in preparation for its planned January 2009 launch. 

The observatory will help solve some of the lingering mysteries in our 
understanding of Earth's carbon cycle and its primary atmospheric 
component, carbon dioxide, a chemical compound that is produced both 
naturally and through human activities. Each year, humans release 
more than 30 billion tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere 
through the burning of fossil fuels. As much as 5.5 billion tons of 
additional carbon dioxide are released each year by biomass burning, 
forest fires and land-use practices such as "slash-and-burn" 
agriculture. These activities have increased atmospheric carbon 
dioxide levels by almost 20 percent during the past 50 years. 

Greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide trap the sun's heat within 
Earth's atmosphere, warming it and keeping it at habitable 
temperatures. However, scientists have concluded that increases in 
carbon dioxide resulting from human activities have thrown Earth's 
natural carbon cycle out of balance, increasing global temperatures 
and changing the planet's climate. 

While scientists have a good understanding of carbon dioxide emissions 
resulting from burning fossil fuels, their understanding of carbon 
dioxide from other human-produced and natural sources is relatively 
poor. They know from ground measurements that only 40 to 50 percent 
of the carbon humans emit remains in Earth's atmosphere; the other 50 
to 60 percent, they believe, is absorbed by Earth's ocean and land 
plants. 

Scientists do not know, however, precisely where the absorbed carbon 
dioxide from human emissions is stored, what natural processes are 
absorbing it or whether those processes will continue to work to 
limit increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide in the future as they 
do now. The observatory's space-based measurements of atmospheric 
carbon dioxide will have the precision, resolution and coverage 
needed to provide the first complete picture of both human and 
natural sources of carbon dioxide emissions. It will show the places 
where they are absorbed, known as "sinks," at regional scales 
everywhere on Earth. Its data will reduce uncertainties in forecasts 
of how much carbon dioxide is in the atmosphere and improve the 
accuracy of global climate change predictions. 

The observatory's science instrument features three first-of-a-kind 
high-resolution spectrometers that spread reflected sunlight into its 
various colors. By analyzing these spectra, scientists can detect 
what gases are in Earth's atmosphere and determine their amounts. The 
spectrometers are specifically tuned to measure the amount of 
reflected sunlight absorbed by carbon dioxide and molecular oxygen. 
These measurements will be analyzed to yield monthly estimates of 
atmospheric carbon dioxide over 621-square-mile regions of Earth's 
surface to an accuracy of 0.3 to 0.5 percent. Scientists will analyze 
these data using global atmospheric chemical transport models, 
similar to those used to predict the weather, to locate carbon 
dioxide sources and sinks. 

The observatory will launch into a 438-mile near-polar, 
sun-synchronous orbit inclined 98.2 degrees to Earth's equator, 
mapping the globe once every 16 days. The mission is designed to last 
two years. It will fly in formation with the five other NASA missions 
that are part of the "A-Train" or afternoon constellation of Earth 
Observing System satellites that cross the equator each day shortly 
after noon. This coordinated flight formation will enable researchers 
to correlate the observatory's data with data from the other NASA 
spacecraft, including nearly simultaneous carbon dioxide measurements 
from the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder instrument on NASA's Aqua 
satellite. 

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory is a NASA Earth System Science 
Pathfinder Program mission managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., for NASA's Science Mission 
Directorate in Washington. Orbital Sciences provides mission 
operations under JPL's leadership. Hamilton Sundstrand in Pomona, 
Calif., designed and built the observatory's science instrument. 
NASA's Launch Services Program at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in 
Florida is responsible for launch management. 

For more information about the Orbiting Carbon Observatory, visit: 



http://oco.jpl.nasa.gov 

	
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