Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
2592255 
Journal Article 
NASA Orbiting Carbon Observatory: measuring the column averaged carbon dioxide mole fraction from space 
Crisp, D; Miller, CE; Decola, PL 
2008 
Yes 
Journal of Applied Remote Sensing
ISSN: 1560-2281 
The NASA Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) will make space-based measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) with the precision, resolution, and coverage needed to characterize regional scale CO2 sources and sinks and quantify their variability over the seasonal cycle. This mission will be launched in December 2008 and will fly in a 705 km altitude, 1: 26 PM sun-synchronous orbit that provides complete coverage of the sunlit hemisphere with a 16-day ground track repeat cycle. OCO carries a single instrument designed to make co-boresighted spectroscopic measurements of reflected sunlight in near-infrared CO2 and molecular oxygen (O-2) bands. These CO2 and O-2 measurements will be combined to provide spatially resolved estimates of the column averaged CO2 dry air mole fraction, X-CO2. The instrument collects 12 to 24 X-CO2 soundings/second over the sunlit portion of the orbit, yielding 200 to 400 soundings per degree of latitude, or 7 to 14 million soundings every 16 days. Existing studies indicate that at least 10% of these soundings will be sufficiently cloud free to yield X-CO2 estimates with accuracies of similar to 0.3 to 0.5% (1 to 2 ppm) on regional scales every month. 
Carbon dioxide; orbiting carbon observatory; NASA Earth System Science Pathfinder Program