Satellite measures globe's salty seas Seattle - UPI A NASA instrument has completed a year of measuring ocean salinity from space, providing important data about Earth's water cycle, the space agency said. Launched June 10, 2011, the satellite mission -- a combined effort between NASA and Argentina's Comision Nacional de Actividades Espaciales -- is compiling a more complete picture of the salty sea and how it varies on a global scale, the agency reported Wednesday. NASA's Aquarius instrument aboard the Argentine satellite is the first such device specifically designed to study surface ocean salinity from space, making 300,000 measurements per month. It uses three passive microwave sensors, called radiometers, to record the thermal signal from the oceans' top 10 millimeters, about 0.4 inches. Aquarius has confirmed what oceanographers have known for many years, that the Atlantic Ocean is saltier than the Pacific and Indian oceans, and that rivers such as the Amazon carry tremendous amounts of fresh runoff from land and spread plumes far into the sea. In the tropics, particularly near the Pacific's Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone, extra rainfall makes equatorial waters somewhat fresher, researchers said. "An overarching question in climate research is to understand how changes in the Earth's water cycle -- meaning rainfall and evaporation, river discharges and so forth -- ocean circulation, and climate link together," said Gary Lagerloef, Aquarius principal investigator at Earth and Space Research in Seattle. "Salinity is the variable we can use to measure that coupling. It's a critical factor, and it will eventually be used to improve climate forecasts," he said.
GMT 14:00 2018 Tuesday ,11 December
Russia tests new telemetry system during manned Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft’s launchGMT 13:17 2018 Friday ,07 December
China to launch mission to land on far side of the moonGMT 09:49 2018 Monday ,03 December
NASA spacecraft to land on asteroid after over two-year journeyGMT 11:38 2018 Monday ,26 November
NASA jittery but confident about landing probe on MarsGMT 08:49 2018 Thursday ,22 November
NASA's InSight lander on course for Mars touchdown on MondayGMT 16:03 2018 Wednesday ,21 November
Russian hi-tech firms design new blades to boost combat helicopters’ speedGMT 10:33 2018 Thursday ,15 November
Astronomers find a frozen Super-Earth orbiting closest single star to our ownGMT 09:51 2018 Thursday ,15 November
Chtf 2018 Opened In Shenzhen On November 14th With A "Time Gallery" Featuring 20-Years Of MemoriesMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor