NASA and JAXA Launch New Satellite to Measure Global Rain and
Snow
Feb. 27, 2014
The Global Precipitation Measurement
(GPM) Core Observatory, a joint Earth-observing mission between
NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA),
thundered into space at 1:37 p.m. EST Thursday, Feb. 27 (3:37
a.m. JST Friday, Feb. 28) from Japan.
The four-ton spacecraft launched
aboard a Japanese H-IIA rocket from Tanegashima Space Center on
Tanegashima Island in southern Japan. The GPM spacecraft
separated from the rocket 16 minutes after launch, at an
altitude of 247 miles (398 kilometers). The solar arrays
deployed 10 minutes after spacecraft separation, to power the
spacecraft.
"With this launch, we have taken
another giant leap in providing the world with an unprecedented
picture of our planet's rain and snow," said NASA Administrator
Charles Bolden. "GPM will help us better understand our
ever-changing climate, improve forecasts of extreme weather
events like floods, and assist decision makers around the world
to better manage water resources."
The GPM Core Observatory will take a
major step in improving upon the capabilities of the Tropical
Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM), a joint NASA-JAXA mission
launched in 1997 and still in operation. While TRMM measured
precipitation in the tropics, the GPM Core Observatory expands
the coverage area from the Arctic Circle to the Antarctic
Circle. GPM will also be able to detect light rain and snowfall,
a major source of available fresh water in some regions.
To better understand Earth's weather
and climate cycles, the GPM Core Observatory will collect
information that unifies and improves data from an international
constellation of existing and future satellites by mapping
global precipitation every three hours.
"It is incredibly exciting to see this
spacecraft launch," said GPM Project Manager Art Azarbarzin of
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "This is
the moment that the GPM Team has been working toward since 2006.
The GPM Core Observatory is the product of a dedicated team at
Goddard, JAXA and others worldwide. Soon, as GPM begins to
collect precipitation observations, we'll see these instruments
at work providing real-time information for the scientists about
the intensification of storms, rainfall in remote areas and so
much more."
The GPM Core Observatory was assembled
at Goddard and is the largest spacecraft ever built at the
center. It carries two instruments to measure rain and snowfall.
The GPM Microwave Imager, provided by NASA, will estimate
precipitation intensities from heavy to light rain, and snowfall
by carefully measuring the minute amounts of energy naturally
emitted by precipitation. The Dual-frequency Precipitation Radar
(DPR), developed by JAXA with the National Institute of
Information and Communication Technology, Tokyo, will use
emitted radar pulses to make detailed measurements of
three-dimensional rainfall structure and intensity, allowing
scientists to improve estimates of how much water the
precipitation holds. Mission operations and data processing will
be managed from Goddard.
"We still
have a lot to learn about how rain and snow systems behave in
the bigger Earth system," said GPM Project Scientist
Gail Skofronick-Jackson of
Goddard. "With the advanced instruments on the GPM Core
Observatory, we will have for the first time frequent unified
global observations of all types of precipitation, everything
from the rain in your backyard to storms forming over the oceans
to the falling snow contributing to water resources."
"We have spent more than a decade
developing DPR using Japanese technology, the first radar of its
kind in space," said
Masahiro Kojima, JAXA
GPM/DPR project manager. "I expect GPM to produce important new
results for our society by improving weather forecasts and
prediction of extreme events such as typhoons and flooding."
The GPM Core Observatory is the first
of NASA's five Earth science missions launching this year. With
a fleet of satellites and ambitious airborne and ground-based
observation campaigns, NASA monitors Earth's vital signs from
land, air and space. NASA also develops new ways to observe and
study Earth's interconnected natural systems with long-term data
records and computer analysis tools to better see how our planet
is changing. The agency freely shares this unique knowledge with
the global community and works with institutions in
the United States and around the world that
contribute to understanding and protecting our home planet.