The New Road To Glory
by Irene Klotz l Inside Science News Service
Could new spacecraft help break the climate debate gridlock?
A new robotic probe is headed to
the launch pad, aiming for a spot aboard what is called the A-train -- a
fleet of Earth-orbiting spacecraft keeping tabs on the planet's
changing climate. The problem seems simple enough: Take the total amount of energy coming
to Earth from the sun, subtract what gets reflected back or re-radiated
from particles in the atmosphere and see what you have left. If more
energy is coming in than going out, it's getting hotter.
The next bit is more complicated: Figure out what fraction of these
atmospheric particles stems from natural phenomena, such as wind-blown
dust and volcanic eruptions, and what is coming from things we can
control -- our industrial processes, business pursuits and recreational
past-times. NASA hopes to tackle the problem in one fell swoop with a spacecraft
named Glory.
Part-solar monitor, part-atmospheric probe, Glory is to
join the quartet of Earth-orbiting satellites known as the Afternoon
Constellation -- nicknamed the A-train -- which fly over the equator at
roughly 1:30 p.m. local time every day so scientists can collect data
from a variety of instruments tracking the same bit of real estate
virtually simultaneously. That information is fed into computer models
used to monitor and forecast climate change.
"As we're starting to set climate policy based on the inputs that are
driving climate change, we need to be able to distinguish how much of
climate change is stuff that we can control and how much is purely
natural," said solar physicist Greg Kopp, with the Laboratory for
Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado in Boulder.