NASA mission achieves exceptional success in identifying sources of greenhouse gas emissions

NASA mission achieves exceptional success in identifying sources of greenhouse gas emissions

Since ​launching 16 months ago, the EMIT ⁣imaging spectrometer aboard the International Space Station has shown an ability to detect more​ than just surface minerals.

More than a year after⁤ first detecting methane plumes from its perch aboard the International Space Station, data from NASA’s ⁤EMIT instrument is⁢ now being used to identify point-source emissions of greenhouse gases ‍with a proficiency that has surprised even its designers.

Short for Earth Surface Mineral ​Dust Source Investigation, EMIT was launched in July ‍2022 to map 10 key minerals on ⁤the surface of the world’s⁤ arid regions.​ Those mineral-related observations, which are already⁤ available to researchers and the public, will help improve understanding‌ of how dust that gets lofted into⁣ the atmosphere affects climate.

Detecting methane was ‍not part ⁢of EMIT’s ⁢primary mission, but the instrument’s designers did expect the ‍imaging‍ spectrometer to have the capability. Now, with more than 750 emissions sources⁤ identified since ⁣August 2022—some small, others in⁢ remote locations, and others⁢ persistent in time—the⁢ instrument has more than delivered in that regard, according to a new study published in Science Advances.

“We were⁢ a little cautious at first about what we could ‌do with the⁣ instrument,” said Andrew​ Thorpe, a⁢ research⁢ technologist on the EMIT science team at NASA’s ‌Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California and the paper’s lead author. ​”It has exceeded our expectations.”

2023-11-20 11:41:03
Original from phys.org

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