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INSTRUMENT
ABOARD NASA'S AQUA SATELLITE JOINS TWIN TO BEGIN COMPREHENSIVE GLOBAL COVERAGE
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1 | | Click
on image for movie. | Roughly
438 miles above the Earth, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS)
instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite opened its Earth-view door on June 24
and took its first look at our planet. This event, called "first light,"
marks a milestone in Earth observation, allowing scientists to conduct the most
comprehensive daily examination of our planet by combining data from two MODIS
instruments on sister satellites in Earth orbit. Like
its twin flying aboard NASA's Terra satellite -- launched in 1999 -- Aqua MODIS
sees almost the entire surface of our planet every day in 36 channels ranging
from visible to thermal infrared wavelengths. On a daily basis, Terra descends
across the equator at 10:30 a.m. in every time zone, while Aqua ascends across
the equator at 1:30 p.m. in every time zone. The different timing of the satellites'
pole-to-pole orbits enables scientists to focus on different aspects of the Earth's
climate system and to see changes within the system during the course of a day.
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2 | | Click
on image for movie. | "With
the launch of Aqua," said MODIS Team Leader Vince Salomonson, of NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., "we are able to observe land, ocean
and atmosphere phenomena in the afternoon with Aqua and in the morning with Terra.
This is especially important for observing rapid, time-varying phenomena like
clouds and water vapor." Understanding
the processes of water evaporation, the movements of water vapor (the dominant
greenhouse gas) throughout the atmosphere -- and the relationship of these processes
to cloud formation -- is essential to climate and local weather modeling.
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3 | | | In
its first day of operations, Aqua MODIS observed significant Earth events occurring
all over the globe. Even as Super Typhoon Chataan was rapidly approaching Japan,
there was severe flooding in southeast Texas, and a vast, thick pall of smoke
from Canadian wildfires blanketed almost the entire U.S. East Coast. MODIS collected
and beamed to Earth these images in very-near real time. Data
from Aqua MODIS will augment scientists' ability to track wind and clouds in the
polar regions where current weather satellites can't see, helping meteorologists
to better monitor and predict global weather patterns.
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4 | | | Aqua
MODIS will also dramatically improve scientists' ability to monitor the daily
(diurnal) cycles of the large-scale burning of plant biomass in regions all across
the planet. "Aqua MODIS will complement Terra, providing four observations
per day that will better sample the daily cycle of fire activity and provide increased
opportunity of cloud-free observations," said Chris Justice, the MODIS Land
Team Leader at the University of Maryland, College Park. Using Aqua MODIS, scientists
can gather more data on how fast and in which direction fires are spreading, as
well as how severely a given fire may affect air quality of downwind urban areas.
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5 | | | Aqua
MODIS data have worldwide applications. The MODIS team is working with the Global
Observation of Forest Cover/Gold-Fire Program and the World Fire Monitoring Center
to provide fire data to the international community. Team members collaborate
with fire monitoring groups in Australia, Botswana, Brazil, Malaysia, Mexico and
Russia. Having
a second MODIS instrument will also improve ocean-based research. "Aqua will
provide continuity of important observations of sea surface temperature and ocean
color, which is a marker of the biochemistry of marine organisms," Salomonson
added.
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6 | | Click
on image for animation. | Aqua
and Terra each carry a MODIS instrument designed to gather planetary data across
36 spectral bands. Data will be processed into 44 distinct data products available
to the world for use in tracking global climate change. The
satellites are part of NASA's Earth Science Enterprise, a long-term research effort
to understand and protect our home planet. Through the study of the Earth, NASA
will help provide sound science to policy and economic decision-makers to improve
life here, while developing the technologies needed to explore the universe and
search for life beyond our home planet. Back
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