NASA Chases Climate Change Clues Into The Stratosphere

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Jan. 09, 2013

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

Ruth Dasso Marlaire 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-4709 
ruth.marlaire@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 13-013

NASA CHASES CLIMATE CHANGE CLUES INTO THE STRATOSPHERE

WASHINGTON -- Starting this month, NASA will send a remotely piloted 
research aircraft as high as 65,000 feet over the tropical Pacific 
Ocean to probe unexplored regions of the upper atmosphere for answers 
to how a warming climate is changing Earth. 

The first flights of the Airborne Tropical Tropopause Experiment 
(ATTREX), a multi-year airborne science campaign with a heavily 
instrumented Global Hawk aircraft, will take off from and be operated 
by NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base in 
California. The Global Hawk is able to make 30-hour flights. 

Water vapor and ozone in the stratosphere can have a large impact on 
Earth's climate. The processes that drive the rise and fall of these 
compounds, especially water vapor, are not well understood. This 
limits scientists' ability to predict how these changes will 
influence global climate in the future. ATTREX will study moisture 
and chemical composition in the upper regions of the troposphere, the 
lowest layer of Earth's atmosphere. The tropopause layer between the 
troposphere and stratosphere, 8 miles to 11 miles above Earth's 
surface, is the point where water vapor, ozone and other gases enter 
the stratosphere. 

Studies have shown even small changes in stratospheric humidity may 
have significant climate impacts. Predictions of stratospheric 
humidity changes are uncertain because of gaps in the understanding 
of the physical processes occurring in the tropical tropopause layer. 
ATTREX will use the Global Hawk to carry instruments to sample this 
layer near the equator off the coast of Central America. 

"The ATTREX payload will provide unprecedented measurements of the 
tropical tropopause," said Eric Jensen, ATTREX principal investigator 
at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif. "This is our 
first opportunity to sample the tropopause region during winter in 
the northern hemisphere when it is coldest and extremely dry air 
enters the stratosphere." 

Led by Jensen and project manager Dave Jordan of Ames, ATTREX 
scientists installed 11 instruments in the Global Hawk. The 
instruments include remote sensors for measuring clouds, trace gases 
and temperatures above and below the aircraft, as well as instruments 
to measure water vapor, cloud properties, meteorological conditions, 
radiation fields and numerous trace gases around the aircraft. 
Engineering test flights conducted in 2011 ensured the aircraft and 
instruments operated well at the very cold temperatures encountered 
at high altitudes in the tropics, which can reach minus 115 degrees 
Fahrenheit. 

Six science flights are planned between Jan. 16 and March 15. The 
ATTREX team also is planning remote deployments to Guam and Australia 
in 2014. Scientists hope to use the acquired data to improve global 
model predictions of stratospheric humidity and composition. 
The ATTREX team consists of investigators from Ames and three other 
NASA facilities; the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., Goddard 
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and Jet Propulsion Laboratory 
in Pasadena, Calif. The team also includes investigators from the 
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Center for 
Atmospheric Research, academia, and private industry. 

ATTREX is one of the first investigations in NASA's new Venture-class 
series of low- to moderate-cost projects. The Earth Venture missions 
are part of NASA's Earth System Science Pathfinder Program managed by 
Langley. These small, targeted science investigations complement 
NASA's larger science research satellite missions. 

ATTREX is one of several active science missions that will be featured 
during a NASA Airborne Science Mission media day at Dryden on Jan. 
25. Reporters interested in attending should submit requests for 
credentials to Dryden's Public Affairs Office by Jan. 11, either by 
email at DrydenPAO@xxxxxxxx or by telephone at 661-276-3449. Media 
representatives wishing to participate must be U.S. citizens or 
permanent resident aliens on assignment from a verifiable media 
organization. No substitutions of non-credentialed personnel will be 
allowed. 

For more information about the ATTREX mission, visit: 

http://espo.nasa.gov/missions/attrex 

A digital ATTREX press kit is available at: 

http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/events/2013/attrex.html 

	
-end-



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