NASA And NOAA Mark 50 Years Of Weather Watching From Space

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April 01, 2010

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

John Leslie 
NOAA's Satellite and Information Service, Silver Spring, Md. 
301-713-2087 
john.leslie@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-072

NASA AND NOAA MARK 50 YEARS OF WEATHER WATCHING FROM SPACE

WASHINGTON -- Fifty years ago, the world's first weather satellite 
lifted off from Cape Canaveral, Fla., opening a new and exciting 
dimension in weather forecasting. Leaders from NASA and the National 
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, hailed the milestone 
as an example of a strong agency partnership and commitment to flying 
the best Earth observation satellites today and in the future. 

The first image from the Television Infrared Observation Satellite, 
known as TIROS-1, was a fuzzy picture of thick bands and clusters of 
clouds over America. An image captured a few days later revealed a 
typhoon approximately 1,000 miles east of Australia. TIROS-1, a 
polar-orbiting satellite, weighed 270 pounds and carried two cameras 
and two video recorders. 

"TIROS-1 started the satellite observations and interagency 
collaborations that produced vast improvements in weather forecasts, 
which have strengthened the nation," said NASA Administrator Charles 
Bolden. "It also laid the foundation for our current global view of 
Earth that underlies all of climate research and the field of Earth 
system science." 

TIROS-1 was NASA's first attempt in using satellites to help 
scientists study weather systems on Earth. NASA managed the program 
with help from the U.S. Army Signal Research and Development Lab, 
RCA, the U.S. Weather Bureau (now the National Weather Service) and 
the U.S. Naval Photographic Interpretation Center. 

"This satellite forever changed weather forecasting," said Jane 
Lubchenco, undersecretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and 
NOAA administrator. "Since TIROS-1, meteorologists have far greater 
information about severe weather and can issue more accurate 
forecasts and warnings that save lives and protect property." 

NASA launched all 10 of the TIROS satellites. Throughout the 1960s, 
each satellite carried increasingly advanced instruments and 
technology. By 1965, meteorologists combined 450 TIROS images into 
the first global view of the world's weather, picking up a line of 
clouds over the Pacific Ocean barreling toward the United States. 

In 1975, NASA launched the first Geostationary Operational 
Environmental Satellite, or GOES, 22,300 miles into space. Its 
ability to orbit in sync with Earth's rotation, combined with 
polar-orbiting satellites, gave U.S. meteorological forecasters a 
powerful tool. 

"We could not provide skillful hurricane forecasts without the crucial 
imagery and data from geostationary and polar-orbiting satellites," 
said Chris Landsea, the science operations officer at NOAA's National 
Hurricane Center in Miami. "Before satellites, tropical storms and 
hurricanes were often missed if they stayed out over the open ocean. 
Now we know tropical storms and hurricanes have swings in numbers 
from decade to decade." 

With continued technological improvements, the satellites gave 
scientists the ability to track changes in climate, from the subtle 
onset of drought and its impact on vegetation to monitoring global 
sea-surface temperatures that signal atmospheric phenomena, such as 
El Nino and La Nina. 

On Feb. 6, 2009, NASA launched the last of the TIROS satellites, NOAA 
N-Prime, from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Now called 
NOAA-19, the satellite provides coverage for the afternoon orbit, 
while the morning orbit is handled by a European satellite through a 
partnership with NOAA and the European Organisation for the 
Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites. 

On Feb. 1, 2010, the White House restructured the National 
Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System, or NPOESS, 
tri-agency effort among NOAA, NASA and the Department of Defense. 
Through the NOAA-NASA partnership, another polar-orbiting satellite 
called the NPOESS Preparatory Project is scheduled to launch in late 
2011. It will demonstrate the capabilities of next-generation sensors 
and provide continuity with NASA's Earth Observing System satellites. 
The NOAA-NASA team also will build, launch and operate two more polar 
satellites under the Joint Polar Satellite System. The satellites are 
planned to be ready for launch in 2015 and 2018. 

NOAA and NASA also are working to launch the next generation GOES-R 
series of satellites, beginning in 2015. These spacecraft will have 
twice the clarity of today's GOES and provide more than 20 times the 
information. 

For more information about the TIROS program, visit: 


http://nasascience.nasa.gov/missions/tiros 


For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov   

	
-end-



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