The world's first satellite designed to map concentrations of carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere will be launched by NASA
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (Oco) will collect precise measurements of the greenhouse gas in the Earth's atmosphere, identifying where it is coming from, where it is absorbed and what happens to it in between.
Scientists hope to get a clearer picture of how the Earth reacts to carbon dioxide with the launch of a new spacecraft designed to collect data on the climate-changing gas on Tuesday
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory is set for launch early Tuesday from California and will take about eight million measurements every 16 days for the next two years.
Researchers said that the information will give them a picture of how the carbon cycle affects climate and how net emissions vary by region. The goal is to measure carbon dioxide (CO2) sources and so-called "sinks" that pull the gas from the atmosphere.
Scientists know that only about 40 percent of the CO2 released since the Industrial Revolution remains in the atmosphere. They can only account for the absorption of another 30 percent, leaving questions about what happened to the 30 percent.
More complete measurements from the observatory should give them a better picture of where the carbon dioxide is being stored and how it changes over time. It should also help account for the uneven absorption of the gas from year-to-year, which does not correspond consistently with how much is released each year.
"It's critical that we understand the processes controlling carbon dioxide in our atmosphere today so we can predict how fast it will build up in the future and how quickly we'll have to adapt to climate change caused by carbon dioxide buildup," scientist David Crisp said.
Previous measurements of carbon dioxide have relied heavily on Earth-based observations and occasional images from aircraft.
No comments:
Post a Comment