NASA is set to launch six new satellites which will help the space agency study tropical cyclones and possibly create new prediction models.
NASA is already set to launch six more satellites into space. The first two are geared to launch sometime after June 12. The satellites are part of NASA’s Time-Resolved Observations of Precipitation Structure and Storm Intensity with a Constellation of Smallsats, or TROPICS. Together the six will join the TROPICS Pathfinder to study tropical cyclones.to do three launches, with two more to follow later this year.
“TROPICS will give us a very frequent view of tropical cyclones,” Scott Braun, a research meteorologist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, shared in a statement. Currently, the weather satellites that NASA and others use only revisit a storm every four to six hours, at the most. That means there are literal hours ofNASA will position each satellite across three slightly different low-Earth orbits. Additionally, the agency will situate each at an angle close to 30 degrees above the equator.
NASA is building out the mission to study tropical cyclones based on the proof-of-concept Pathfinder CubeSat which NASA launched in 2021. Pathfinder has captured images of several tropical cyclones since it began its mission last June. Through Pathfinder’s success, the team behind TROPICS has been able to fine-tune the software on the new satellites. Additionally, they’ve been able to fine-tune the operational procedures, too. This should allow them to get things up and running smoothly. Being able to do that easily will make expanding the constellation easier.
Finally, because Pathfinder has been in orbit for a year now, the team has already calibrated it. That means they can use the data from Pathfinder to quickly calibrate the rest of the TROPICS satellites. This should increase how quickly the team can get the new CubeSats operational so they can study tropical cyclones.Josh Hawkins fell in love with writing and technology at a young age.
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