NASA Flights Target How Pollution, Storms and Climate Mix

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June 06, 2013

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

Jim Scott 
University of Colorado, Boulder 
303-492-3114 
Jim.Scott@xxxxxxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 13-167

NASA FLIGHTS TARGET HOW POLLUTION, STORMS AND CLIMATE MIX

WASHINGTON -- NASA aircraft will take to the skies over the southern 
United States this summer to investigate how air pollution and 
natural emissions, which are pushed high into the atmosphere by large 
storms, affect atmospheric composition and climate. 

NASA will conduct its most complex airborne science campaign of the 
year from Houston's Ellington Field, which is operated by the 
agency's Johnson Space Center, beginning Aug. 7 and continuing 
through September. The field campaign draws together coordinated 
observations from NASA satellites, aircraft and an array of ground 
sites. 

More than 250 scientists, engineers, and flight personnel are 
participating in the Studies of Emissions, Atmospheric Composition, 
Clouds and Climate Coupling by Regional Surveys (SEAC4RS) campaign. 
The project is sponsored by the Earth Science Division in the Science 
Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. Brian Toon of 
the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at the University 
of Colorado, Boulder, is SEAC4RS lead scientist. 

Aircraft and sensors will probe the atmosphere from top to bottom at 
the critical time of year when weather systems are strong enough and 
regional air pollution and natural emissions are prolific enough to 
pump gases and particles high into the atmosphere. The result is 
potentially global consequences for Earth's atmosphere and climate. 

"In summertime across the United States, emissions from large seasonal 
fires, metropolitan areas, and vegetation are moved upward by 
thunderstorms and the North American Monsoon," Toon said. "When these 
chemicals get into the stratosphere they can affect the whole Earth. 
They also may influence how thunderstorms behave. With SEAC4RS we 
hope to better understand how all these things interact." 

SEAC4RS will provide new insights into the effects of the gases and 
tiny aerosol particles in the atmosphere. The mission is targeting 
two major regional sources of summertime emissions: intense smoke 
from forest fires in the U.S. West and natural emissions of isoprene, 
a carbon compound, from forests in the Southeast. 

Forest fire smoke can change the properties of clouds. The particles 
in the smoke can reflect and absorb incoming solar energy, 
potentially producing a net cooling at the ground and a warming of 
the atmosphere. The addition of large amounts of chemicals, such as 
isoprene, can alter the chemical balance of the atmosphere. Some of 
these chemicals can damage Earth's protective ozone layer. 

The mission will use a number of scientific instruments in orbit, in 
the air, and on the ground to paint a detailed picture of these 
intertwined atmospheric processes. As a fleet of formation-flying 
satellites known as NASA's A-Train passes over the region every day, 
sensors will detect different features of the scene below. NASA's 
ER-2 high-altitude aircraft will fly into the stratosphere to the 
edge of space while NASA's DC-8 aircraft will sample the atmosphere 
below it. A third aircraft from SPEC Inc., of Boulder, Colo., will 
measure cloud properties. 
One benefit of this thorough examination of the region's atmosphere 
will be more accurate satellite data. 

"By using aircraft to collect data from inside the atmosphere, we can 
compare those measurements with what our satellites see and improve 
the quality of the data from space," said Hal Maring of the Earth 
Science Division at NASA Headquarters. 

The SEAC4RS campaign is partly supported by the U.S. Naval Research 
Laboratory. NASA scientists involved in the mission come from NASA's 
Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif.; Goddard Space Flight 
Center in Greenbelt., Md.; Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, 
Calif.; and Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. 

NASA's Earth Science Project Office at Ames manages the SEAC4RS 
project. The DC-8 and ER-2 research aircraft are managed by NASA's 
Dryden Flight Research Center and based at Dryden's Aircraft 
Operations Facility in Palmdale, Calif. 

For more information on the mission, visit: 

http://espo.nasa.gov/missions/seac4rs 

	
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