Satellites to map ocean clouds that keep Earth cool
23 September 2022
A new European Space Agency (ESA) mission involving UCL researchers will 3D map Earth’s “cooling blanket” of low-lying ocean clouds that may be at risk of disappearing due to climate change.
The 10th Earth Explorer mission, known as Harmony, has been approved by the ESA Programme Board on Earth Observation, meaning it can move from the preparatory phase into the design consolidation and implementation phase, with a launch scheduled for 2029.
The mission consists of two identical satellites that will fly in tandem alongside a Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite to better understand three areas of Earth’s interconnecting systems: the ocean-atmosphere interface, land ice and sea ice (how they are distorting over time) and tectonic strain and volcanic processes.
The two satellites will carry a thermal infrared instrument, based on a proposal from UCL’s Professor Jan-Peter Muller, that will work together to 3D map the motion of low-lying ocean clouds in finer detail than previously possible.
The differing angles of the ten infrared cameras within each instrument, and different perspective offered by the two Harmony satellites spaced hundreds of kilometres apart but directed at the same patch of the Earth’s surface, will provide stereo imaging, enabling scientists to calculate cloud top height as well as motion (and therefore wind).
When there are no clouds, the beams will travel to the ocean and be used to calculate a crucial factor affecting the interaction of clouds and ocean - sea surface temperature.
Professor Muller (UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory), a member of Harmony’s Mission Advisory Group, said: “These clouds cover vast areas of the ocean and cool the planet by reflecting light, and therefore allowing heat back into space. But how they will respond to climate change is unclear. One model suggests a warming ocean will lead them to disappear – with catastrophic consequences for our climate.”
“This mission will provide a sub-kilometre resolution imaging of the movement of the clouds, rather than a resolution of tens of kilometres as achieved previously.”
“Current climate change forecasts do not account for clouds because of their complexity, as they are dependent on so many small- and large-scale factors. By having a much finer level of detail about the processes that lead to different cloud types, our data will help refine mathematical models of how these clouds behave and whether they could speed up or – as some models have suggested – even slow down global warming.”
In addition to the thermal infrared instrument, each of Harmony’s satellites will carry a large payload, a receive-only synthetic aperture radar (SAR). These will record radio waves originating from the accompanying Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite as they bounce back from the Earth’s surface, allowing scientists to measure small shifts in the shape of the land surface, such as those related to earthquakes and volcanic activity, as well as of land ice and sea ice. Over the ocean, this will also provide simultaneous high-resolution measurements of the sea-surface, its motion and wind to help reveal the complexities of how the sea and air interact.
Over sea ice, it will provide the first ever instantaneous view of sea ice fracturing (lead formation), as well as the formation of ridges (a pile-up of sea ice where two sheets of floating ice meet).
Professor Julienne Stroeve (UCL Earth Sciences), also a member of Harmony’s Mission Advisory Group, said: “The Harmony mission will enable us to record sea-ice deformation processes as they happen, something we don’t normally observe unless we’re in the field. This can help us to improve how we model sea ice in climate models, especially as many assumptions in models are based on a time when we had much thicker ice in the Arctic Ocean. As the ice cover thins, it is becoming more mobile and responds more readily to wind and currents.
“Also, when a lead opens up in winter, there is a strong exchange of heat and moisture between the ocean and the colder atmosphere, and this leads to cloud formation as well as exchanges of gases. With Harmony, we can observe those processes as they happen and once again improve how we represent them in models.”
The mission will also allow for the study of 3D deformation and flow dynamics of glaciers at the rapidly changing marginal zones of the ice sheets for a better understanding of sea-level rise.
Links
- ESA web story
- Professor Jan-Peter Muller’s academic profile
- UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory
- Professor Julienne Stroeve’s academic profile
- UCL Earth Sciences
- UCL Mathematical & Physical Sciences
Image
- Credit: ESA. Below: graphic illustrating the Harmony and Sentinel-1 satellites flying in convoy. Credit: ESA
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Mark Greaves
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E: m.greaves [at] ucl.ac.uk