Science and Tech

NASA satellites take off in tropical cyclones mission

Rocket Lab launched the first of two NASA storm-tracking satellites into orbit from a launch complex in New Zealand

Representative Image; NASA satellite (Photo: DW)
Representative Image; NASA satellite (Photo: DW) 

NASA launched two satellites into low Earth orbit on Monday in the first part of a mission to better understand and track hurricanes and tropical cyclones.

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Two of the small, boxy satellites, known as CubeSats, were onboard a rocket that set off from the launch complex in Mahia, New Zealand as part of the TROPICS (Time-Resolved Observations of Precipitation structure and storm Intensity with a Constellation of Smallsats) mission.

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The satellites were launched using the Electron orbital launch vehicle developed by Rocket Lab.

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When it is complete, TROPICS will form a constellation of four identical CubeSats designed to observe tropical cyclones, making observations more frequently than current weather tracking satellites.

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Gathering data more frequently can help scientists improve weather forecasting models.

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The second set of two CubeSats should be launched in about two weeks also using Electron rockets from Rocket Lab, NASA TV reported.

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What will TROPICS study?

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TROPICS will study tropical cyclones as part of NASA's Earth Venture Class missions, which select targeted science missions to fill gaps in the understanding of systems on Earth.

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What makes TROPICS mission unique is the way the satellites are orbiting in formation with one another with one another — like constellations of stars.

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This observing system offers an unprecedented combination of horizontal and temporal resolution to measure environmental and inner-core conditions for tropical cyclones on a nearly global scale, according to William Blackwell at MIT's Lincoln Laboratory who leads the TROPICS team.

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"TROPICS will demonstrate that a constellation approach to Earth science can provide improved resolution, configurable coverage (tropics, near global, or global), flexibility, reliability, and launch access at extremely low cost, thereby serving as a model for future missions," Blackwell wrote on the mission's website.

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With climate change making extreme weather events more frequent, hurricanes and tropical cyclones pose increasing risks to those living in the paths of the storms.

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Scientists hope the TROPICS mission will reveal more about what drives the rapid changes in both the storm's structure and and its intensity.

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Edited by: Rebecca Staudenmaier

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