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April 11, 2007
NOAA, NASA RESTORE CLIMATE SENSOR
TO UPCOMING NPP SATELLITE
NASA and NOAA
Wednesday announced a plan to restore a key
ozone layer climate sensor to the National Polar-orbiting Operational
Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS) program. The Ozone Mapping and
Profiler
Suite (OMPS) Limb will be returned to NPOESS Preparatory Project (NPP)
satellite set to launch in 2009.
The NPOESS partners will give conditional authority to Northrop Grumman
Space
Technology, Redondo
Beach, Calif.
to proceed with restoration of the
instrument. The effort will be contingent on successful negotiations
between
the company and the government on the full cost of the effort. Northrop
Grumman
Space Technology is the mission prime contractor.
The NPOESS is a tri-agency environmental monitoring program directed by
the
Department of Commerce (NOAA's parent agency), the Department of
Defense and
NASA. A recent restructuring of the program had removed the OMPS Limb
sensor
from the NPP mission.
Restoring the OMPS Limb sensor directly addresses one of the
recommendations of
the recently released National Research Council's report "Earth Science
Applications from Space: National Imperatives for the Next Decade and
Beyond."
With the launch of the first spacecraft planned for 2013, NPOESS will
bring
improved data and imagery that will allow better weather forecasts,
severe-weather monitoring and detection of climate change.
The NPOESS preparatory mission will provide continuity of observations
taken by
NASA's Earth Observing System satellites Aqua and Terra. The NPP
mission also
will provide risk reduction for three of the NPOESS critical sensors,
as well
as the data processing and ground systems.
NOAA and NASA have agreed to share equally the cost to restore the OMPS
Limb to
the NPP spacecraft. The OMPS Limb will measure the vertical
distribution of
ozone and complements existing NPOESS systems. It will give scientists
a better
understanding of the structure of the atmosphere.
"Having the OMPS Limb will give scientists a more complete picture of
the
content and distribution of gases in the atmosphere, and whether that
distribution is good or bad," said retired Navy Vice Admiral Conrad C.
Lautenbacher, Jr., Ph.D, undersecretary of commerce for oceans and
atmosphere
and NOAA administrator. "NOAA is committed to working with the
scientific
community to address their climate and other satellite observation
requirements. This is a great step in that direction."
"This sensor will allow us to move forward with the next generation of
technology for weather and climate prediction," NASA Administrator
Michael
Griffin added.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is celebrating 200
years of
science and service to the nation. NASA is an independent agency whose
Earth
science research is used to characterize, understand and predict
climate.
##
Contact:
Tabatha
Thompson
NASA Headquarters
202-358-3895
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2007/apr/HQ_07085_NOAA_NASA_instrument.html
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