World
Image From Space
PARIS : A
315-million-euro satellite
that will gauge the impact
of climate change on the
movement of water across
land, air and sea was hoisted
into space early on Monday,
the European Space Agency
(ESA) said.
The Soil Moisture and Ocean
Salinity (SMOS) probe was
lifted into space on a Russian
Rockot launcher from the
Plesetsk cosmodrome in northern
Russia. By providing the
first space-based measures
of Earth’s surface
soil moisture and ocean
salinity, SMOS will fill
important gaps in scientific
knowledge about our planet’s
life-giving water cycle.
It will also
help meteorologists predict
extreme weather events and
make more accurate forecasts
in near-real time, say experts.
“Climate
change is a fact, but its
impact on precipitation,
evaporation, surface runoff
and flood risks is still
uncertain,” said Yann
Kerr, a research at the
Center for the Study of
the Biosphere from Space
and scientific director
for the SMOS mission.
“The
availability of water plays
a more important role on
these impacts than temperature
itself,” he told journalists
earlier this month.
Scientists
rely heavily on computer
models to project weather
and climate patterns, and
having additional data based
on concrete observations
will make those models more
accurate, he explained.
SMOS has two
closely intertwined missions.
One is to
measure the water content
of soil across the planet
every three days to a depth
of one-to-two metres (six-to-seven
feet) which will improve
short- and medium-term weather
forecasting and monitoring
photosynthesis and plant
growth. It is also critical
for calculating Earth’s
carbon cycle, the process
by which heat-trapping carbon
dioxide is released and
absorbed, especially by
plants and the oceans.
Climate change,
scientists agree, is largely
caused by CO2 pollution
that has upset that natural
balance.
Global estimates
of soil moisture will also
help forecast drought and
flood risk. When a storm
breaks, for example, the
ability of rainwater to
percolate down depends on
the type of soil and how
much water it is already
holding.
Its second
job is to measure changes
in the salt content of sea
surface waters, data that
will enhance our understanding
of what drives global ocean
circulation patterns.
Ocean circulation
helps moderates climate,
notably by transporting
heat from the equator to
the poles. Some studies
have suggested that global
warming could disrupt these
cycles in ways that could
dramatically alter regional
weather patterns.
Variations
in the salinity of ocean
waters depend on the addition
or removal of fresh water
through evaporation and
precipitation and, in polar
regions, on the freezing
and melting of ice.
Both sets
of data will be collected
by a single instrument called
MIRAS, the large Microwave
Imaging Radiometer with
Aperture Synthesis.
The nominal
life of the SMOS mission
is three years, with a possible
two-year extension.
A second ESA
satellite lifted into space
Monday, Proba-2, is designed
to demonstrate innovative
in-orbit technologies. It
will test a new type of
lithium-ion battery, an
advanced data and power
management system, a dual-frequency
GPS receiver, an experimental
solar panel, an exploration
micro-camera and a dozen
other technologies.