NASA Air Pollution Instrument Completes Satellite Integration

0
409
TEMPO Operations Architecture

Revealed: The Secrets our Clients Used to Earn $3 Billion

TEMPO operations structure. Credit: NASA

Crews efficiently accomplished the primary totally built-in powered testing of the Tropospheric Emissions: Monitoring of Pollution (TEMPO) instrument on Intelsat IS40e on June 30. This testing at Maxar Technologies’ satellite tv for pc manufacturing facility in Palo Alto, California, marks the completion of the TEMPO Instrument integration with the IS40e satellite tv for pc.

From its geostationary orbit (geosynchronous equatorial orbit) — a excessive Earth orbit that enables satellites to match Earth’s rotation — TEMPO will take hourly daytime air high quality observations at an unprecedented spatial decision. Its measurements will embody all the decrease 48 United States, reaching from Puerto Rico and Mexico to northern Canada, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

“The completion of TEMPO Instrument integration with its host satellite will allow Intelsat IS40e to transition into environmental testing, which brings us one significant and exciting step closer to launch,” mentioned Kevin Daugherty, TEMPO mission supervisor at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia.

TEMPO Testing

Crews recently completed the first fully integrated powered testing of the Tropospheric Emissions: Monitoring of Pollution (TEMPO), instrument on Intelsat IS40e at Maxar Technologies’ satellite manufacturing facility in Palo Alto, California. Credit: Image courtesy of Maxar Technologies

Environmental testing will include thermal vacuum, dynamics and electromagnetic interference/electromagnetic compatibility. These tests will ensure the spacecraft will successfully endure conditions it will be exposed to during launch and in the harsh environment of space. TEMPO is currently targeted to launch aboard a SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket in January 2023.

From its geostationary orbit TEMPO will also form part of an air quality satellite “virtual constellation” that will track pollution around the Northern Hemisphere.

Kelly Chance, of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is the principal investigator for TEMPO. Ball Aerospace built the TEMPO instrument.