NASA Launches Aura Satellite 20
ukcollin writes "NASA successfully launched the Aura satellite today after several
previous failed attempts. The Aura satellite was launched by a 12-story Delta 2 rocket, at 6:01am (EST) from Vandenberg AFB in California. The satellite is reported to have cost in excess of $785 million dollars, and its main
mission will be to study
the Earth's ozone to try and determine if the ozone hole is shrinking or increasing. Although it will be focused on the stratosphere (the ozone layer), it will also be tracking pollution, climate changes, etc. by scanning and analyzing each of Earth's atmospheric levels all the way down to the troposphere."
Spaceflight Now status (Score:4, Interesting)
19 min till first post? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or maybe launching something into space is not a big deal and even if people are willing to debate the results of science even though they don't care about the people / things that carry it out. PS: 19 min till first post?
Re:19 min till first post? (Score:2)
It's just that Slashdotters don't need any evidence or proof of what's happening with the atmosphere.
They're already dead-certain that the atmosphere isn't changing and, even if it is, we're not causing the changes and, even if we are, we've just become the hand of nature/God and therefore the changes are natural/divine.
No satellite proof is needed so the satellite is redundant as is the story. "Nothing to see here. Move along," they would say -- before being killed at the next zebra crossing.
Re:19 min till first post? (Score:2)
The ozone layer...isn't that outside? Slashdotters spend most of their time inside, hence nothing to worry about! :)
A little irony (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:A little irony (Score:3, Interesting)
The shuttle SRBs separate pretty early in the launch process - I wouldn't think any of their exhaust would be high enough off the ground to make it to the ozone layer.
Let's not forget the scale, either -- even the shuttle pales in comparison to, say, the amount of CFCs put into the atmosphere (and I mean up where it counts) by volcanic eruptions (though I haven't done the math on amount per eruption a
Re:A little irony (Score:3, Informative)
Here is an article. [aero.org]
Please note that I made no claim to the amount of ozone a single rocket launch depletes, it is fairly small. But rockets do destroy ozone, lots of rockets are launched every year, and the number of launches is undoubtedly going to increase as time goes on.
Re:A little irony (Score:2)
It sounds like we'll want to favor liquid-fuel over solid when possible, which most folks already were thinking already. That's good news.
And, of course, air-release solutions that break the problem up (a big turbojet to get you to ~50,000 feet and thus less fuel to burn to get X tons to orbit) should be better in this department than from-ground solutions.
Xentax
Re:A little irony (Score:1)
The above test is in BOLD at the top of the page you linked to. Perhaps you overstate the case?
Re:A little irony (Score:3, Interesting)
Interesting...I had never given that much thought until now. For anyone else who's interested, here's more info on rocket emissions [aero.org].
tis where I work (Score:3, Insightful)
The Air Force is extremely concerned about the pollution by their rockets. The EELV program (the new launch vehicles by Lockheed and Boeing, Atlas V and Delta IV) now has emissions as one of its factors when they finally decide on the rocket to use. Side note: the USAF originally want
Laser printer and photocopy the planet to safety (Score:5, Funny)
It just occured to be that as laser printers and photcopiers generate ozone, if we all just print more stuff on paper made from sustainable forestry we will have all the ozone we need and remove surplus CO2 from the atmosphere :-)
Now, before anyone takes me too seriously and prints a copy of every RFC ever written "to save the planet", this doesn't really work. For a start ozone at low altitude is just a toxic gas that will not help protect us from UV....
Re:Laser printer and photocopy the planet to safet (Score:2)
Re:Laser printer and photocopy the planet to safet (Score:2)
'Take the A-Train', from NASA (Score:2)
The "A-Train" satellite formation consists of six satellites flying in close proximity in a near future. The first one, Aqua, was launched in 2002. The second one, Aura, will be launched in June 2004, while CloudSAT, CALIPSO and PARABOL will start their missions in October 2004. The
Re:'Take the A-Train', from NASA (Score:2, Informative)
Re:'Take the A-Train', from NASA, redux (Score:1)
Terra is not considered as part of the "A-Train" concept/constellation. It is the first satellite of the EOS Terra-Aqua-Aura trio, however, so there is a degree of overlap with the A-train. Its ascending node is at approx 1030L, as opposed to the afternoon ascendancy of the A-train components.