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#ICESat2 - Art of science - planet painting by - @ Kerstin Jacobs http://little-starlight-galaxy.eu

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#meltingIceCaps
#ICESat2 - Art of science - planet painting by - @ Kerstin Jacobs http://little-starlight-galaxy.eu
Did somebody say space laser?
We’re set to launch ICESat-2, our most advanced laser instrument of its kind, into orbit around Earth on Sept. 15. The Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite-2 will make critical observations of how ice sheets, glaciers and sea ice are changing over time, helping us better understand how those changes affect people where they live. Here’s 10 numbers to know about this mission:
One Space Laser
There’s only one scientific instrument on ICESat-2, but it’s a marvel. The Advanced Topographic Laser Altimeter System, or ATLAS, measures height by precisely timing how long it takes individual photons of light from a laser to leave the satellite, bounce off Earth, and return to ICESat-2. Hundreds of people at our Goddard Space Flight Center worked to build this smart-car-sized instrument to exacting requirements so that scientists can measure minute changes in our planet’s ice.
Sea ice is seen in front of Apusiaajik Glacier in Greenland. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Jim Round
Two Types of Ice
Not all ice is the same. Land ice, like the ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, or glaciers dotting the Himalayas, builds up as snow falls over centuries and forms compacted layers. When it melts, it can flow into the ocean and raise sea level. Sea ice, on the other hand, forms when ocean water freezes. It can last for years, or a single winter. When sea ice disappears, there is no effect on sea level (think of a melting ice cube in your drink), but it can change climate and weather patterns far beyond the poles.
3-Dimensional Earth
ICESat-2 will measure elevation to see how much glaciers, sea ice and ice sheets are rising or falling. Our fleet of satellites collect detailed images of our planet that show changes to features like ice sheets and forests, and with ICESat-2’s data, scientists can add the third dimension – height – to those portraits of Earth.
Four Seasons, Four Measurements
ICESat-2’s orbit will make 1,387 unique ground tracks around Earth in 91 days – and then start the same ground pattern again at the beginning. This allows the satellite to measure the same ground tracks four times a year and scientists to see how glaciers and other frozen features change with the seasons – including over winter.
532 Nanometer Wavelength
The ATLAS instrument will measure ice with a laser that shines at 532 nanometers – a bright green on the visible spectrum. When these laser photons return to the satellite, they pass through a series of filters that block any light that’s not exactly at this wavelength. This helps the instrument from being swamped with all the other shades of sunlight naturally reflected from Earth.
Six Laser Beams
While the first ICESat satellite (2003-2009) measured ice with a single laser beam, ICESat-2 splits its laser light into six beams – the better to cover more ground (or ice). The arrangement of the beams into three pairs will also allow scientists to assess the slope of the surface they’re measuring.
Seven Kilometers Per Second
ICESat-2 will zoom above the planet at 7 km per second (4.3 miles per second), completing an orbit around Earth in 90 minutes. The orbits have been set to converge at the 88-degree latitude lines around the poles, to focus the data coverage in the region where scientists expect to see the most change.
800-Picosecond Precision
All of those height measurements come from timing the individual laser photons on their 600-mile roundtrip between the satellite and Earth’s surface – a journey that is timed to within 800 picoseconds. That’s a precision of nearly a billionth of a second. Our engineers had to custom build a stopwatch-like device, because no existing timers fit the strict requirements.
Nine Years of Operation IceBridge
As ICESat-2 measures the poles, it adds to our record of ice heights that started with the first ICESat and continued with Operation IceBridge, an airborne mission that has been flying over the Arctic and Antarctic for nine years. The campaign, which bridges the gap between the two satellite missions, has flown since 2009, taking height measurements and documenting the changing ice.
10,000 Pulses a Second
ICESat-2’s laser will fire 10,000 times in one second. The original ICESat fired 40 times a second. More pulses mean more height data. If ICESat-2 flew over a football field, it would take 130 measurements between end zones; its predecessor, on the other hand, would have taken one measurement in each end zone.
And One Bonus Number: 300 Trillion
Each laser pulse ICESat-2 fires contains about 300 trillion photons! Again, the laser instrument is so precise that it can time how long it takes individual photons to return to the satellite to within one billionth of a second.
Learn more about ICESat-2: https://www.nasa.gov/icesat-2
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Regrann from @ulalaunch - NASA’s #ICESat2 mission will launch to space aboard a ULA #DeltaII 7420-10 rocket. This 2-stage rocket has 4 solid rocket motors and a 10-foot-diameter composite fairing. This will be the 155th and final mission for the venerable #DeltaII rocket, which first launched in 1989. #rocketscience #rocketsofinstagram - #regrann https://www.instagram.com/p/BnuBaUxlDCj/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1w5ax12x7genr
#ICESat2 - Art of science - planet painting by - Kerstin Jacobs http://little-starlight-galaxy.eu https://www.instagram.com/p/B1u01RqI3B4/?igshid=lsj9stlci7ge
In temperatures that drop below -20 degrees Fahrenheit, along a route occasionally blocked by wind-driven ice dunes, a hundred miles from any other people, a team led by two of our scientists are surveying an unexplored stretch of Antarctic ice.
They’ve packed extreme cold-weather gear and scientific instruments onto sleds pulled by two tank-like snow machines called PistenBullys, and after a stop at the South Pole Station (seen in this image), they began a two- to three-week traverse.
The 470-mile expedition in one of the most barren landscapes on Earth will ultimately provide the best assessment of the accuracy of data collected from space by the Ice Cloud and land Elevation Satellite-2 (ICESat-2), set to launch in 2018.
This traverse provides an extremely challenging way to assess the accuracy of the data. ICESat-2’s datasets are going to tell us incredible things about how Earth’s ice is changing, and what that means for things like sea level rise.
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@VP: #DeltaIIロケットは、地球の周りの氷を研究する@NASAの#ICESat2ミッションを打ち上げに成功しました。おめでとうございます。
The #DeltaII rocket successfully launched @NASA‘s #ICESat2 mission to study ice around Earth. Congratulations on your 130th consecutive successful launch, @ulalaunch! https://t.co/JtDzsFemPI
— Vice President Mike Pence Archived (@VP45) 2018年9月15日
Lori Magruder, #ICESat2 Science Definition Team Lead talks with Elisabeth Woldeyohannes @vanitygloria about the science investments for the ICESat-2 Launch. #NASASocial (at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bn9p67VgKNW/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1igbk383vrpau
Last ever Delta II launch After a career spanning some 30 years the last ever Delta II rocket has blasted into orbit carrying a new billion dollar NASA satellite to study climate change. The Ice, Cloud and land Elevation Satellite-2, or ICESat-2 blasted off in to the predawn sky from Space Launch Complex 2 at the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. ICESat-2 was deployed into a 496 metre high near polar orbit measuring ice sheet elevation and sea ice thickness, as well as global land topography and vegetation characteristics.