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Joint NASA, European satellite to support tracking of ocean rising into 2030s

Stephen Kuper
Joint NASA, European satellite to support tracking of ocean rising into 2030s

For the first time, US and European agencies have prepared to launch a 10-year satellite mission to continue to study the clearest sign of climate change – rising oceans – using the Sentinel-6/Jason-CS mission (short for Jason-Continuity of Service).

Sentinel-6/Jason-CS will be the longest-running mission dedicated to answering the question: how much will Earth's oceans rise by 2030?

By 2030, Sentinel-6/Jason-CS will add to nearly 40 years of sea level records, providing the clearest, most sensitive measure of how humans are changing the planet and its climate.

The mission consists of two identical satellites, Sentinel-6A and Sentinel-6B, launching five years apart. The Sentinel-6A spacecraft was on display for the media on 15 November for a last look in its clean room in Germany's IABG space test centre.

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The satellite is being prepared for a scheduled launch in November 2020 from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.

Sentinel-6/Jason-CS follows in the footsteps of four other joint US-European satellite missions — TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason-1, Ocean Surface Topography/Jason-2, and Jason-3 — that have measured sea level rise over the past three decades.

The data gathered by those missions have shown that Earth's oceans are rising by an average of 0.1 inches (three millimetres) per year.

Sentinel-6/Jason-CS will continue that work, studying not just sea-level change but also changes in ocean circulation, climate variability such as El Niño and La Niña, and weather patterns, including hurricanes and storms.

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Josh Willis, the mission's project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said, “Global sea-level rise is, in a way, the most complete measure of how humans are changing the climate.

“If you think about it, global sea-level rise means that 70 per cent of Earth's surface is getting taller — 70 per cent of the planet is changing its shape and growing. So, it's the whole planet changing. That's what we're really measuring.”

Decades of space- and ground-based observations have documented Earth's surface temperature rising at a rapidly accelerating rate. The oceans help to stabilise our climate by absorbing over 90 per cent of the heat trapped on the planet by excess greenhouse gases, like carbon dioxide, that have been emitted into the atmosphere since the start of the Industrial Revolution.

As the oceans warm, they expand, increasing the volume of water; the trapped heat also melts ice sheets and glaciers, contributing further to sea-level rise.

The rate at which it is rising has accelerated over the past 25 years and is expected to continue accelerating in years to come.

Sentinel-6/Jason-CS will measure down to the millimeter how much global sea level rises during the 2020s and how fast that rise accelerates.

As the rate increases, humans will need to adapt to the effects of rising seas — including flooding, coastal erosion, hazards from storms and negative impacts to marine life.

Along with measuring sea-level rise, the mission will provide datasets that can help with weather predictions, assessing temperature changes in the atmosphere and collecting high-resolution vertical profiles of temperature and humidity.

As with its Jason-series predecessors, Sentinel-6/Jason-CS will gather global ocean data every 10 days, providing insights into large ocean features like El Niño events.

However, unlike previous Jason-series missions, its higher-resolution instruments will also be able to provide data on smaller ocean features — including complex currents — that will benefit navigation and fishing communities.

Willis added, “Global sea-level rise is one of the most expensive and disruptive impacts of climate change that there is. In our lifetimes, we're not going to see global sea-level fall by a meaningful amount. We're literally charting how much sea level rise we're going have to deal with for the next several generations.”

Sentinel-6/Jason-CS is being jointly developed by the European Space Agency (ESA), the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellite (EUMETSAT), NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), with funding support from the European Commission and support from France's National Centre for Space Studies (CNES).

NASA's contributions to the Sentinel-6 mission are science instrument payloads for the two Sentinel-6 satellites, launch services for those satellites, ground systems supporting the science instruments operations and support for the international Ocean Surface Topography Science Team.

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