Skip to main content

SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches satellite which will measure sea level rise over the next 30 years

NewsColony
SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches satellite which will measure sea level rise over the next 30 years

A US-European satellite designed to extend a decades-long measurement of global sea surface heights was launched into Earth orbit from California on Saturday.

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the satellite blasted off from Vandenberg Air Force Base at 9:17am and arced southward over the Pacific Ocean. 

The Falcon’s first stage flew back to the launch site and landed for reuse.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is seen above taking off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Saturday morning

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is seen above taking off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Saturday morning

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is seen above taking off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Saturday morning

The rocket was carrying a joint American-European satellite that will monitor ocean levels over the next three decades

The rocket was carrying a joint American-European satellite that will monitor ocean levels over the next three decades

The rocket was carrying a joint American-European satellite that will monitor ocean levels over the next three decades

The Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite was released from the second stage about an hour later. 

It then deployed its solar panels and made first contact with controllers.

Named for a former NASA official who had a key role in developing space-based oceanography, the satellite’s main instrument is an extremely accurate radar altimeter that will bounce energy off the sea surface as it sweeps over Earth’s oceans. 

An identical twin, Sentinel-6B, will be launched in 2025 to ensure continuity of the record.

A camera attached to the rocket shows it above the launch point over Vandenberg Air Force Base in California

A camera attached to the rocket shows it above the launch point over Vandenberg Air Force Base in California

A camera attached to the rocket shows it above the launch point over Vandenberg Air Force Base in California

The rocket took off and then arced southward over the Pacific Ocean on Saturday morning

The rocket took off and then arced southward over the Pacific Ocean on Saturday morning

The rocket took off and then arced southward over the Pacific Ocean on Saturday morning

Video from NASA shows the Sentinel-6 satellite Michael Freilich being released into orbit above the Earth

Video from NASA shows the Sentinel-6 satellite Michael Freilich being released into orbit above the Earth

Video from NASA shows the Sentinel-6 satellite Michael Freilich being released into orbit above the Earth

The Sentinel 6 program is made up of two identical satellites, with the first (seen in the above rendering) launching on this mission, they will monitor sea level change from space

The Sentinel 6 program is made up of two identical satellites, with the first (seen in the above rendering) launching on this mission, they will monitor sea level change from space

The Sentinel 6 program is made up of two identical satellites, with the first (seen in the above rendering) launching on this mission, they will monitor sea level change from space

Space-based sea level measurements have been uninterrupted since the 1992 launch of the US-French satellite TOPEX-Poseidon, which was followed by a series of satellites including the current Jason-3.

Sea surface heights are affected by heating and cooling of water, allowing scientist to use the altimeter data to detect such weather-influencing conditions as the warm El Nino and the cool La Nina.

The measurements are also important for understanding overall sea level rise due to global warming that scientists warn is a risk to the world’s coastlines and billions of people.

‘Our Earth is a system of intricately connected dynamics between land, ocean, ice, atmosphere and also of course our human communities, and that system is changing,’ Karen St. Germain, NASA’s Earth Science Division director, said in a pre-launch briefing Friday.

‘Because 70 per cent of the Earth’s surface is ocean, the oceans play an enormous role in how the whole system changes,’ she said.

The new satellite is expected to have unprecedented accuracy. 

The Falcon 9 rocket then made a successful landing back onto the launch pad for reuse

The Falcon 9 rocket then made a successful landing back onto the launch pad for reuse

The Falcon 9 rocket then made a successful landing back onto the launch pad for reuse

The dramatic image above shows the first stage booster returning to a bullseye landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Saturday

The dramatic image above shows the first stage booster returning to a bullseye landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Saturday

The dramatic image above shows the first stage booster returning to a bullseye landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Saturday

Europe and the United States are sharing the $1.1 billion cost of the mission, which includes the twin satellite

Europe and the United States are sharing the $1.1 billion cost of the mission, which includes the twin satellite

Europe and the United States are sharing the $1.1 billion cost of the mission, which includes the twin satellite

‘This is an extremely important parameter for climate monitoring,’ Josef Aschbacher, the European Space Agency’s director of Earth observation, told The Associated Press this week.

‘We know that sea level is rising,’ Aschbacher said. 

The big question is, by how much, how quickly.

Other instruments on board will measure how radio signals pass through the atmosphere, providing data on atmospheric temperature and humidity that can help improve global weather forecasts.

Europe and the United States are sharing the $1.1 billion cost of the mission, which includes the twin satellite.  

Source: Daily Mail |World News

The post SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches satellite which will measure sea level rise over the next 30 years appeared first on NewsColony.
NewsColony



source https://newscolony.com/spacex-falcon-9-rocket-launches-satellite-which-will-measure-sea-level-rise-over-the-next-30-years/

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Volunteers book hotel room for homeless man with SingapoRediscovers vouchers

NewsColony Volunteers book hotel room for homeless man with SingapoRediscovers vouchers © The Independent Singapore Singapore — A group of volunteers from the Mummy Yummy Singapore welfare organisation donated their SingapoRediscovers Vouchers to book a hotel room for a homeless man. The man, who was identified as Jayden, did not have a place to live while waiting for the Housing Board (HDB) to allocate him a rental flat. In a Facebook post on Mummy Yummy Singapore’s page on Wednesday (Dec 16), the volunteers said: “We used our $100 Rediscover Singapore vouchers to redeem hotel stay for him and successfully booked 9 days worth of stay at 3 days per voucher.” They added that they were unable to book a longer stay because of higher hotel rates over Christmas and New Year. The volunteers hoped that they would be able to bridge Jayden’s stay until he got a flat. “Thanks our government for giving us these vouchers which in return we can put them to good use for people in need,” th...

Chinese stars moonlighting as live-streamers

NewsColony Chinese stars moonlighting as live-streamers Li JIaqi and Yang Mi joined forces to sell products online during coronavirus, blurring the boundaries between conventional celebrities and live streamers. Photo: @TrendingWeibo/Twitter The line between Chinese celebrities and live streamers continues to blur these days. Luxury brands are expanding their pool of friend-of-the-brand endorsements with top live streamers – Louis Vuitton, for example, tapped both actress Song Jia and “lipstick king” live streamer Li Jiaqi for its much anticipated 520 Chinese Valentine’s Day campaign. Celebrities, actors and singers are jumping on the bandwagon to test out their commercial values on e-commerce platforms, with Yang Mi, Li Xiaolu and Michelle Ye Xuan just a few of the screen stars moonlighting on live streaming portals including Taobao, TikTok and Red Book. So why are Chinese celebrities so eager to embrace the battlefield of live streaming e-commerce, and how are they getting on so...

Coronavirus UK: BBC makes changes to ‘lift people’s spirits’

Coronavirus UK: BBC makes changes to ‘lift people’s spirits’ NewsColony BBC viewers have been warned that ‘things will look and sound a bit different’ during the coronavirus crisis.  In a blog post on the corporation’s website, BBC News Chief Fran Unsworth outlined a number of changes its newsroom was making in light of the ‘rapidly evolving situation’.   Among the changes, presenters will doing their own make-up, many interviews will be conducted remotely and the BBC will rely more on its network of local reporters, Ms Unsworth explained. TV veterans Mr Motivator and Angela Rippon have also signed up for a new BBC One show to lift people’s spirits during the pandemic. HealthCheck UK Live, with Watchdog’s Michelle Ackerley and CBBC star Dr Xand van Tulleken will air every weekday for two weeks. TV veterans Mr Motivator and Angela Rippon have also signed up for a new BBC One show to lift people’s spirits during the pandemic HealthCheck UK Live, with Wa...