Rocket blasts off with Nasa satellite to track climate change

Published February 1, 2015
A United Launch Alliance Delta II rocket, with the Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) observatory on board, is being launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, on Saturday.—AFP
A United Launch Alliance Delta II rocket, with the Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) observatory on board, is being launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, on Saturday.—AFP

CAPE CANAVERAL: An unmanned Delta 2 rocket lifted off from California on Saturday carrying a Nasa satellite to measure how much water is in Earth’s soil, information that will help weather forecasting and tracking of global climate change.

The tiny amount of soil moisture links the planet’s overall environmental systems — its water, energy and carbon cycles — as well as determines whether particular regions are afflicted with drought or flooding.

“It’s the metabolism of the system,” Nasa’s Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) observatory lead scientist Dara Entekhabi told reporters at a prelaunch news conference.

The 127-foot rocket, built and flown by United Launch Alliance, blasted off at 6:22am from Vandenberg Air Force Base, located on California’s central coast, a live Nasa Television broadcast showed.

The launch had been delayed a day by high winds and a second day to make minor repairs on the rocket’s insulation.

Perched on top on the rocket was Nasa’s 950 kg SMAP, which will spend at least three years measuring the amount of water in the top 2 inches of Earth’s soil.

Overall, soil moisture accounts for less than 1 per cent of the planet’s total water reservoir, with 97pc in the planet’s oceans and nearly all of the rest locked in ice, said Entekhabi, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Currently, scientists rely largely on computer models to account for soil moisture.

But from its orbital perch 685 km above Earth, SMAP has two microwave instruments to collect actual soil moisture measurements everywhere on Earth and update the measurements every two- to three days.

Published in Dawn February 1st, 2015

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