New Space Sensor as a Hosted Payload to Track Air Pollution Across North America

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Nov. 8, 2012

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

RELEASE: 12-390

NEW SPACE SENSOR AS A HOSTED PAYLOAD TO TRACK AIR POLLUTION ACROSS NORTH AMERICA

WASHINGTON -- NASA has selected a proposal from the Smithsonian 
Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Mass., to build the first 
space-based instrument to monitor major air pollutants across the 
North American continent hourly during daytime. The instrument, to be 
completed in 2017 at a cost of not more than $90 million, will share 
a ride on a commercial satellite as a hosted payload to an orbit 
about 22,000 miles above Earth's equator. 

The competitively selected proposal, Tropospheric Emissions: 
Monitoring of Pollution (TEMPO), is led by principal investigator 
Kelly Chance of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. The 
investigation will for the first time make accurate observations of 
tropospheric pollution concentrations of ozone, nitrogen dioxide, 
sulfur dioxide, formaldehyde, and aerosols with high resolution and 
frequency over North America. 

"NASA is excited to make this initial step into using commercially 
available space on geostationary communication satellites to engage 
in cutting edge science," said John Grunsfeld, astronaut and 
associate administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate in 
Washington. "We expect to see significant advances in air quality 
research with TEMPO. The vantage point of geostationary orbit offers 
the potential for many new opportunities in other areas of Earth 
system science." 

The TEMPO team has extensive experience in measuring the components of 
air quality from low-Earth orbit. Chance is on the science teams of 
the Ozone Monitoring Instrument now in orbit on NASA's Aura satellite 
and two European air quality space sensors. The team includes 
partnerships with Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp., in Boulder, 
Colo.; NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va.; NASA's Goddard 
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.; the U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency in Research Triangle Park, N.C.; and several U.S. 
universities and research organizations. 

TEMPO was chosen from 14 proposals submitted to NASA's Earth Venture 
Instrument program. Earth Venture missions, part of the Earth System 
Science Pathfinder program, are small, targeted science 
investigations that complement NASA's larger research missions. In 
2007, the National Research Council recommended NASA undertake this 
type of regularly solicited, quick-turnaround project. The first 
Earth Venture selection was awarded in 2010 for five airborne 
investigations. The second was for a full satellite mission, the 
Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System, announced earlier this 
year. Today's announcement is the first Earth Venture Instruments 
award. 

The TEMPO investigation will provide an instrument by September 2017 
that NASA will seek to deploy on an appropriate satellite in 
geostationary orbit. Investigation costs will be capped at $90 
million, excluding the launch vehicle and integration to the selected 
satellite platform. Numerous commercial communication satellites are 
expected to be suitable for the TEMPO instrument in the 2017 time 
frame. 

After being deployed on a geostationary satellite, TEMPO will observe 
Earth's atmosphere in ultraviolet and visible wavelengths to 
determine concentrations of many key atmospheric pollutants. From 
geostationary orbit, these observations can be made several times 
each day when North America is facing the sun instead of once per 
day, which is the case with current satellites orbiting a few hundred 
miles above the surface. Other space agencies are planning similar 
observations over Europe and Asia after TEMPO is in orbit, allowing 
for the formation of a constellation of geostationary air quality 
satellites. 

NASA is planning to announce two new Earth Venture calls for proposals 
in 2013 and make 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. Langley 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 

	
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