Space

NASA outlines six new storm-chasing CubeSats

NASA outlines six new storm-chasing CubeSats
NASA will soon launch TROPICS, a constellation of 12 CubeSats, designed to study hurricanes
NASA will soon launch TROPICS, a constellation of 12 CubeSats, designed to study hurricanes 
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NASA will soon launch TROPICS, a constellation of 12 CubeSats, designed to study hurricanes
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NASA will soon launch TROPICS, a constellation of 12 CubeSats, designed to study hurricanes 
One of the eight CYGNSS CubeSats that NASA will launch in December, in order to better study tropical cyclones and storm patterns
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One of the eight CYGNSS CubeSats that NASA will launch in December, in order to better study tropical cyclones and storm patterns
NASA will launch the RAVAN CubeSat later in November, to study the Earth's energy budget and the effect of greenhouse gases on the planet's climate
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NASA will launch the RAVAN CubeSat later in November, to study the Earth's energy budget and the effect of greenhouse gases on the planet's climate
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Shoebox-sized CubeSats may soon be visiting the Moon and Mars, but their main focus is still studying Earth and testing technologies much closer to home. Before the launch of SLS in 2018, which will see dozens of CubeSats hitching a ride, NASA has outlined six new small satellite missions to be launched over the next few months that are equipped with new methods of studying the Earth's atmosphere, climate and weather.

Four of the new CubeSats, named RAVAN, IceCube, HARP and MiRaTA, will be launched as individual satellites, while the remaining two missions, dubbed CYGNSS and TROPICS, will be made up of constellations of CubeSats working in unison.

First off the block will be the Radiometer Assessment using Vertically Aligned Nanotubes (RAVAN), which is set to launch later in November. RAVAN will be tasked with detecting small changes in the Earth's energy budget, the amount of energy our atmosphere loses to space, in order to improve our understanding of how greenhouse gases can influence the planet's climate.

NASA will launch the RAVAN CubeSat later in November, to study the Earth's energy budget and the effect of greenhouse gases on the planet's climate
NASA will launch the RAVAN CubeSat later in November, to study the Earth's energy budget and the effect of greenhouse gases on the planet's climate

Early next year, the Microwave Radiometer Technology Acceleration (MiRaTA) CubeSat will launch to study temperature, water vapor and cloud ice, which is all useful data for predicting the weather and tracking storms. In spring (Northern hemisphere), two more weather-focused small satellites will launch: IceCube, which measures cloud ice thanks to a new miniaturized high-frequency microwave radiometer, and the Hyper Angular Rainbow Polarimeter (HARP), which looks at airborne particles and the distribution of different-sized cloud droplets.

Before then, NASA is planning to kick off the first of its constellation arrangements with the Cyclone, Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS). Launching December 12, the CYGNSS system will be composed of eight satellites flying together to study tropical cyclones by way of measuring wind intensity over the ocean. A new method is employed to take those measurements, where the satellites track reflected GPS signals as they bounce off the water's surface, to study how the air and sea interact during cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons.

One of the eight CYGNSS CubeSats that NASA will launch in December, in order to better study tropical cyclones and storm patterns
One of the eight CYGNSS CubeSats that NASA will launch in December, in order to better study tropical cyclones and storm patterns

And finally, (take a deep breath) the Time-Resolved Operations of Precipitation structure and storm Intensity with a Constellation of Smallsats (TROPICS) uses a series of CubeSats equipped with the instruments onboard MiRaTA. The system will regularly measure temperature and water vapor over the course of a particular storm's life cycle. NASA hasn't yet specified when TROPICS will launch.

"The affordability and rapid build times of these CubeSat projects allow for more risk to be taken, and the more risk we take now the more capable and reliable the instruments will be in the future," says Pamela Millar, flight validation lead at NASA's Earth Science Technology Office. "These small satellites are changing the way we think about making instruments and measurements. The cube has inspired us to think more outside the box."

NASA explains the importance of these small satellites in the video below. (Video courtesy of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.)

Source: NASA

Small Sats are the Next Big Thing

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