NASA Prepares To Launch Next Earth-Observing Satellite Mission

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Jan. 20, 2011

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

Sarah DeWitt 
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-0535 
sarah.dewitt@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 11-024

NASA PREPARES TO LAUNCH NEXT EARTH-OBSERVING SATELLITE MISSION

WASHINGTON -- NASA's newest Earth-observing research mission is 
nearing launch. The Glory mission will improve our understanding of 
how the sun and tiny atmospheric particles called aerosols affect 
Earth's climate. Glory also will extend a legacy of long-term solar 
measurements needed to address key uncertainties about climate 
change. 

Glory is scheduled to launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in 
California on Feb. 23 at 5:09 a.m. EST. It will join a fleet called 
the Afternoon Constellation or "A-train" of satellites. This group of 
other Earth-observing satellites, including NASA's Aqua and Aura 
spacecraft, flies in tight formation. 

"Glory is going to help scientists tackle one of the major 
uncertainties in climate change predictions identified by the United 
Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change: the influence of 
aerosols on the energy balance of our planet," said Michael Freilich, 
director of NASA's Earth Science Division in the Science Mission 
Directorate at the agency's headquarters in Washington. "This mission 
also marks the first satellite launch under President Obama's climate 
initiative that will advance the United States' contribution to 
cutting-edge and policy-relevant climate change science." 

Originally confirmed in 2005, Glory has been developed by a team of 
engineers and scientists at several government, industry and academic 
institutions across the country. The Glory spacecraft arrived at 
Vandenberg on Jan. 11 after a cross-country road trip from Orbital 
Sciences Corporation in Dulles, Va. 

"The spacecraft is in place at the launch and all of the post-shipment 
inspections and electrical tests have been completed," said Bryan 
Fafaul, Glory project manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center 
in Greenbelt, Md. The spacecraft will be mated to Orbital's Taurus XL 
3110 rocket next month. 

Glory will carry new technology designed to unravel some of the most 
complex elements of the Earth system. The mission carries two primary 
instruments, the Aerosol Polarimetry Sensor (APS) and the Total 
Irradiance Monitor (TIM). APS will improve measurement of aerosols, 
the airborne particles that can influence climate by reflecting and 
absorbing solar radiation and modifying clouds and precipitation. 

TIM will extend a decades-long data record of the solar energy 
striking the top of Earth's atmosphere, or total solar irradiance. 
APS will collect data at nine different wavelengths, from the visible 
to short-wave infrared, giving scientists a much-improved 
understanding of aerosols. The instrument, NASA's first 
Earth-orbiting polarimeter, will help scientists distinguish between 
natural and human-produced aerosols. The information will be used to 
refine global climate models and help scientists determine how our 
planet is responding to human activities. 

The TIM instrument will maintain and improve upon a 32-year record of 
total solar irradiance, a value that fluctuates slightly as the sun 
cycles through periods of varying intensity approximately every 11 
years. While scientists have concluded that solar variability is not 
the main cause of the warming observed on Earth in recent decades, 
the sun has historically caused long-term climate changes. Having a 
baseline of the solar energy that reaches Earth gives us a way to 
evaluate future climate changes. Better measurements of total solar 
irradiance give scientists another way to test their climate models 
and understand the sun's longer cyclical changes and how they may 
impact the climate. 

Glory will fly in a low-Earth orbit at an altitude of 438 miles, about 
the distance from Boston to Washington. After launch, mission 
operators will conduct verification tests for 30 days and then begin 
to collect data for at least three years. 

Glory's Taurus launch rocket also will carry into orbit a secondary 
payload: NASA's Educational Launch of Nanosatellite, or ELaNA, 
mission. This mission will put three small research satellites, or 
CubeSats, into orbit for Montana State University, the University of 
Colorado and a consortium of state universities called Kentucky 
Space. 

Glory is managed by Goddard for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in 
Washington. Launch management is provided by NASA's Launch Services 
Program at the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. 

Orbital is responsible for Glory's design, manufacture, payload 
integration, and testing, as well as spacecraft operations at its 
Mission Operations Complex in Dulles, Va. The Laboratory for 
Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado at 
Boulder provided and will operate the TIM instrument. Raytheon Space 
and Airborne Systems in El Segundo, Calif., provided the APS 
instrument, which will be operated by Goddard's Institute for Space 
Studies in New York. 

For more information about Glory, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/glory   

	
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