NASA Selects Low Cost, High Science Earth Venture Space System

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June 18, 2012

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington                               
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 12-203

NASA SELECTS LOW COST, HIGH SCIENCE EARTH VENTURE SPACE SYSTEM

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected an ocean wind study proposal led by 
the University of Michigan from among 19 submitted to the agency's 
Announcement of Opportunity for small spaceflight investigations of 
the Earth system. The proposed mission will make accurate 
measurements of ocean surface winds throughout the life cycle of 
tropical storms and hurricanes, which could help lead to better 
weather forecasting. 

The competitively-selected proposal, the Cyclone Global Navigation 
Satellite System (CYGNSS), is led by Principal Investigator Dr. Chris 
Ruf of the University of Michigan, and includes partnerships with the 
Southwest Research Institute of Texas, Surrey Satellite Technology of 
Colorado and NASA Ames Research Center. 

It is the second award, and first award for space-based 
investigations, in the Earth Venture-class series of rapidly 
developed, cost-constrained projects for NASA's Earth Science 
Division. The award will be funded during the next five years for 
$151.7 million. The cost includes initial development, launch, 
deployment and data analysis. 

The mission will use a constellation of small satellites that will be 
carried to orbit on a single launch vehicle. The CYGNSS data will 
enable scientists, for the first time, to probe key air-sea 
interaction processes that take place near the inner core of the 
storms, which are rapidly changing and play large roles in the 
genesis and intensification of hurricanes. The CYGNSS measurements 
also may provide information to the hurricane forecast community. 

Once in orbit, CYGNSS's eight micro-satellite observatories will 
receive both direct and reflected signals from Global Positioning 
System (GPS) satellites. The direct signals pinpoint CYGNSS 
observatory positions, while the reflected signals respond to ocean 
surface roughness, from which wind speed is retrieved. 

"The CYGNSS mission is both a scientific and a programmatic advance 
for NASA's Earth science and applications program," said John 
Grunsfeld, NASA's Science Mission Directorate associate administrator 
in Washington. "CYGNSS will provide vital science data on tropical 
cyclones, and the CYGNSS team will advance our ability to obtain 
high-quality Earth science data through smaller, more affordable 
space systems." 

The Earth Venture missions are part of NASA's Earth System Science 
Pathfinder program. The small, targeted science investigations 
complement NASA's larger research missions. In 2007, the National 
Research Council recommended NASA undertake these types of regularly 
solicited, quick-turnaround projects. The previous Earth Venture 
award was for five airborne investigations all of which are 
progressing well with initial data being collected. The first 
Announcement of Opportunity in the Earth Venture-Instruments series 
was issued earlier this year, and proposals are now under review. 

The Earth Venture program is expected to continue with awards at 
regular intervals for investigations using cutting edge 
instrumentation carried on airborne platforms, on small space 
missions, or as secondary instruments or hosted payloads on larger 
platforms. NASA's Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va., manages the 
Earth System Science Pathfinder program for NASA's Science Mission 
Directorate. The missions in this program provide an innovative 
approach to address Earth science research with periodic windows of 
opportunity to accommodate new scientific priorities. 

For more information about the Earth System Science Pathfinder 
program, visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/MKvgJO 

For information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/ 

	
-end-



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