NASA Flights Seek To Improve View Of Air Pollution From Space

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June 23, 2011

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington                          
202-385-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Michael Finneran 
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. 
757-598-1720 
michael.p.finneran@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 11-200

NASA FLIGHTS SEEK TO IMPROVE VIEW OF AIR POLLUTION FROM SPACE

WASHINGTON -- Two NASA research airplanes will fly over the 
Baltimore-Washington region and northeast Maryland this summer as 
part of a mission to enhance the capability of satellites to measure 
ground-level air quality from space. 

The campaign is called DISCOVER-AQ, which stands for Deriving 
Information on Surface conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved 
Observations Relevant to Air Quality. It is one of the five Earth 
Venture class of investigations selected last year as part of NASA's 
Earth System Science Pathfinder program. These targeted science 
investigations complement NASA's larger research missions. 

A fundamental challenge for spaceborne instruments monitoring air 
quality is to distinguish between pollution high in the atmosphere 
and pollution near the surface where people live. The new NASA field 
campaign will make measurements from aircraft in combination with 
ground-based observation sites to help scientists better understand 
how to observe ground-level pollution from space in the future. 

"What we're trying to do with DISCOVER-AQ is to fill the knowledge gap 
that limits our ability to monitor air pollution with satellites," 
said James Crawford, the mission's principal investigator at NASA's 
Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. 

Since many countries, including the United States, have large gaps in 
ground-based networks of air pollution monitors, experts look to 
satellites to provide a more complete geographic perspective on the 
distribution of pollutants. 

A fleet of Earth-observing satellites, called the Afternoon 
Constellation or "A-train" will pass over the DISCOVER-AQ study area 
each day in the early afternoon. The satellites' data, especially 
from the Aqua and Aura spacecraft, will give scientists the 
opportunity to compare the view from space with that from the ground 
and aircraft. 

"The A-Train satellites have been useful in giving us a broader view 
of air pollution than has ever been seen," said Kenneth Pickering, 
DISCOVER-AQ's project scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center 
in Greenbelt, Md. "DISCOVER-AQ will help interpret that data to 
improve air-quality analysis and regional air-quality models." 

Initial test flights are planned for the week of June 27, with up to 
14 science flights starting as early as July 1. The P-3B, a 
four-engine turboprop, will carry nine instruments. The two-engine 
UC-12 will carry two instruments. Sampling will focus on an area 
extending from Beltsville, Md., to the northeastern corner of 
Maryland in a pattern that follows major roadway traffic corridors. 
The flight path passes over six ground measurement sites operated by 
the Maryland Department of the Environment. 

NASA investigators will be joined in the air by colleagues from the 
National Center for Atmospheric Research, the University of 
California, Berkeley, and the University of Innsbruck in Austria. The 
117-foot P-3B will fly low-altitude spiral profiles over the ground 
stations. These profiles will extend from 15,000 feet to as low as 
1,000 feet from the ground. The flights will sample air along traffic 
corridors at low altitude between ground stations. 

The smaller King Air UC-12 will collect data from as high as 26,000 
feet. The plane's instruments will look down at the surface, much 
like a satellite instrument, and measure particulate and gaseous 
pollution. 

The combined scientific resources are what make DISCOVER-AQ a rare 
opportunity for air quality researchers. "One instrument is not more 
important than another," said Jennifer Hains, a research statistician 
with the Maryland Department of the Environment in Baltimore. "The 
combination of all of them makes this campaign valuable." 

Ground sites maintained by the Maryland Department of the Environment 
form the backbone of the surface network. These sites will be 
supplemented by additional instrumentation provided by NASA, the 
Environmental Protection Agency, Howard University, Pennsylvania 
State University, the University of Maryland-Baltimore County, and 
Millersville University in Pennsylvania. 

The DISCOVER-AQ flights are the beginning of a four-year campaign that 
will bring NASA aircraft to Houston and other urban regions. NASA's 
Langley center manages the Earth System Science Pathfinder program 
for the agency's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. 

For more information on the DISCOVER-AQ mission and for updates on 
when the flights are scheduled to fly, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/discover-aq 

	
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