NASA Mission to Help Unravel Key Carbon, Climate Mysteries

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Jan. 29, 2009

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

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

RELEASE: 09-021

NASA MISSION TO HELP UNRAVEL KEY CARBON, CLIMATE MYSTERIES

WASHINGTON -- NASA's first spacecraft dedicated to studying 
atmospheric carbon dioxide is in final preparations for a Feb. 23 
launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Carbon dioxide 
is the leading human-produced greenhouse gas driving changes in 
Earth's climate. 

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory will provide the first complete 
picture of human and natural carbon dioxide sources as well as their 
"sinks," the places where carbon dioxide is pulled out of the 
atmosphere and stored. It will map the global geographic distribution 
of these sources and sinks and study their changes over time. The 
measurements will be combined with data from ground stations, 
aircraft and other satellites to help answer questions about the 
processes that regulate atmospheric carbon dioxide and its role in 
Earth's climate and carbon cycle. 

Mission data will help scientists reduce uncertainties in predicting 
future carbon dioxide increases and make more accurate climate change 
predictions. Policymakers and business leaders can use the data to 
make more informed decisions that improve the quality of life on 
Earth. 

"It's critical that we understand the processes controlling carbon 
dioxide in our atmosphere today so we can predict how fast it will 
build up in the future and how quickly we'll have to adapt to climate 
change caused by carbon dioxide buildup," said David Crisp, principal 
investigator for the Orbiting Carbon Observatory at NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. 

"OCO's carbon dioxide measurements will be pivotal in advancing our 
knowledge of virtually all Earth system land, atmosphere, and ocean 
processes," said Michael Freilich, director of NASA's Earth Science 
Division in Washington. "They will play crucial roles in refining our 
knowledge of climate forcings and Earth's response processes." 

The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is determined by 
the balance between its sources and the sinks where it is absorbed on 
land and in the ocean. Human activities, particularly fossil fuel 
burning and deforestation, have upset Earth's carbon cycle balance. 
Since the Industrial Revolution began in 1750, atmospheric carbon 
dioxide has increased from about 280 parts per million to about 385 
parts per million. Climate models indicate increased greenhouse gases 
have been the primary driver of Earth's increasing surface 
temperature. 

Of all the carbon humans have added to Earth's atmosphere since the 
start of the Industrial Revolution, only about 40 percent has 
remained in Earth's atmosphere. About half of the remaining 60 
percent can be accounted for in Earth's ocean. The rest must have 
been absorbed somewhere on land, but scientists cannot yet determine 
specifically where this is taking place or what controls the 
efficiency of these land sinks. Scientists refer to this as the 
"missing" carbon sink. 

The new observatory will dramatically improve global carbon dioxide 
measurements, collecting about 8 million measurements every 16 days 
for at least two years with the precision, resolution and coverage 
needed to characterize carbon dioxide's global distribution. 
Scientists need these precise measurements because carbon dioxide 
varies by just 10 parts per million throughout the year on regional 
to continental scales. 

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory's three high-resolution spectrometers 
spread reflected sunlight into its various colors like a prism. Each 
spectrometer focuses on a different, narrow color range, detecting 
light with the specific colors absorbed by carbon dioxide and 
molecular oxygen. The less carbon dioxide present in the atmosphere, 
the more light the spectrometers detect. By analyzing the amount of 
light, scientists can determine relative concentrations of these 
chemicals. The data will then be input into computer models of the 
global atmosphere to quantify carbon dioxide sources and sinks. 

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory will be launched on a Taurus XL rocket 
into a 438-mile near-polar orbit. It will lead five other NASA 
satellites that cross the equator each day shortly after noon, making 
a wide range of nearly simultaneous Earth observations. 

JPL manages the Orbiting Carbon Observatory for NASA's Science Mission 
Directorate in Washington. Orbital Sciences Corporation of Dulles, 
Va., built the spacecraft and the Taurus XL rocket and provides 
mission operations under JPL leadership. NASA's Launch Services 
Program at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Fla., leads launch and 
countdown management. 

For more information about the Orbiting Carbon Observatory, visit: 










http://www.nasa.gov/oco 

	
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