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August
15, 2007
R.I.P TOMS: NASA OZONE INSTRUMENT
LAID TO
REST AFTER THREE DECADES
During its almost 30-year
lifespan, the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) program provided
unique
and valuable information that shaped public policy and international
perspectives on the environment. The instrument was important because
its data
established the geographical extent of the "ozone hole" over the
Antarctic, and monitored its year-to-year evolution.
With the recent decommissioning of the last of the three TOMS
instruments,
Earth Probe TOMS, the TOMS program closed on May 30, 2007. The legacy
TOMS
leaves behind will not be forgotten.
The TOMS program began with the launch of TOMS Flight Model No. 1 on
the
Nimbus-7 spacecraft on October 24, 1978. NASA scientists originally
designed
the instrument to study weather patterns by mapping global ozone. They
quickly
realized that some of the data collected by TOMS was much more
significant than
they initially had imagined.
The instrument gave scientists a tool for studying ozone in the upper
and lower
atmosphere in a way that had never been done before, more frequently
and with
far greater detail. The TOMS instrument captured a vast number of
images of the
ozone daily, which allowed scientists to constantly monitor changes in
the
ozone. The capability to measure long-term trends with the TOMS
instrument
series has been critical to international ozone assessment activities.
Ozone that surrounds the Earth in the upper atmosphere acts as
protection from
the sun’s harmful ultraviolet rays. A thinning of the upper
ozone layer would
put people at greater risk for skin cancer, cataracts and impaired
immune
systems. Ozone in the lower atmosphere, close to Earth’s
surface, is a
pollutant that causes damage to lung tissue and plants.
TOMS measured the Earth’s ozone levels by calculating the
amount of ultraviolet
light scattered from the Earth’s surface and atmosphere back
into space. Since
the ozone layer absorbs ultraviolet light, areas in which less
ultraviolet
light was recorded indicated the presence of more ozone.
"TOMS was unique because it was a total ozone mapper. It measured ozone
on
every spot on the Earth every day. That is why it was so valuable, it
saw
everything," said Richard McPeters, the principal investigator for
Earth
Probe TOMS, at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt,
Md.
McPeters worked on TOMS from the earliest days of the program.
The data from the TOMS instrument were critical to the detection of
long-term
damage to the ozone layer over long periods of time, including above
heavily
populated areas. These discoveries led to the passage of the Montreal
Protocol
in 1987, an international agreement restricting the production of
ozone-depleting chemicals.
TOMS data were also key in confirming the destruction of the ozone at
the South
Pole each year, the "ozone hole," which is now an annual occurrence.
A new TOMS instrument on the Russian spacecraft Meteor-3 replaced
TOMS/Nimbus-7
after 14 years of service. TOMS/Meteor-3 was the first significant U.S.
instrument
to fly aboard a Russian spacecraft and provided a main source of ozone
data
until it stopped working in 1994.
The final leg of the TOMS program was launched in July of 1996. This
TOMS
instrument, aboard the Earth Probe spacecraft, was placed at a lower
altitude
than its predecessors. The lower orbit allowed Earth Probe TOMS to
provide
better resolution for viewing smaller phenomena, like volcanoes, forest
fires
and sources of pollution. This instrument took almost 200,000
measurements
daily, covering nearly the entire planet.
Earth Probe TOMS also kicked off collaboration between Goddard and
Capitol
College of Laurel, Md. Students from Capitol College’s
Space
Operations Institute worked with the TOMS Flight Operations Team at
Goddard to
redesign the Earth Probe TOMS ground control system. A few years later,
the
TOMS control center was moved to the Capitol College
campus and the
students took over the full operation of the instrument with periodic
supervision by the team at Goddard.
Edward Chang, the contracting officer’s technical
representative from Goddard,
says that even though the TOMS mission has ended, the collaboration
between
NASA and Capitol
College
continues. The college took the
lead in decommissioning Earth Probe TOMS on May 30, 2007.
Following failure of the transmitter in late 2006, TOMS was no longer
able to
send its data back to the scientists on the ground, so continuing to
operate
the instrument was useless. The spacecraft will remain in its current
orbit,
but with all fuel and other energy sources cut off. It will take 37
years for
the spacecraft to re-enter the atmosphere.
The Ozone Monitoring Instrument, a more advanced spectrometer that
flies on the
Aura satellite, has taken over the work done by the TOMS program.
Launched in
2004, this instrument was created through collaboration between Goddard
and the
Netherlands Agency for Aerospace Programs working with the Finnish
Meteorological Institute. Like TOMS, the Ozone Monitoring Instrument
records
total ozone and other atmospheric data related to ozone chemistry and
climate.
TOMS delivered some of the most critical and influential environmental
data
ever recorded, documenting the long-term decline of global ozone levels
and the
emergence and development of the Antarctic ozone hole. It allowed the
world to
view and understand ozone in a new way, helping to shape international
environmental perspectives and policy.
The program’s legacy, according to McPeters, lies in the
incredibly detailed
information TOMS provided for examining changes in the ozone layer.
"People got used to being able to view the Earth the way TOMS viewed
it,
seeing a global image of the ozone in high resolution every day. At
this point,
as a result of TOMS, that view is now considered a necessity."
For more information, visit:
http://toms.gsfc.nasa.gov/eptoms/ep.html
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/aura/spacecraft/omi.html
http://ozonewatch.gsfc.nasa.gov/
##
Contact:
Laura Spector
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
301-286-0918
laura.a.spector@nasa.gov
This
text is derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2007/toms_end.html
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