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Satellite will give CSU researchers key warming data

Published February 21, 2009 at 12:05 a.m.

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Carbon dioxide is the villain in global warming scenarios, and Tuesday's space launch is all about measuring carbon around the world to see how well it's behaving - or misbehaving.

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory launches into space from Vandenburg Air Force Base in California armed with a computer program designed by Colorado State University researchers.

The mission essentially "tracks the Earth's breathing," said Scott Denning atmospheric science professor at CSU.

It employs a spectrograph, a handy scientific tool that can identify elements as they drift through light, forming a prism-like bar code of what's out there.

CSU's algorithm works with the spectrograph to detect the ratio of oxygen to carbon in different spots around the world. Because oxygen exists almost uniformly everywhere on the planet, the varying ratios can pinpoint where there is extra carbon or an absence of it.

Healthy forests and cool oceans "breathe in" carbon by the ton, including about half of the carbon emitted by coal plants, automobiles and other icons of the modern age.

That's hugely important because the carbon that isn't absorbed by plants and oceans gets into the atmosphere where it acts as a barrier, preventing sunlight from bouncing back into the upper atmosphere, hence warming the planet.

Decaying forests lose the capacity to absorb carbon, as do forests that have been razed for farming or development.

The satellite will orbit pole to pole about every 90 minutes, and by shifting its crossings slightly everyday, it will get a good even coverage of the globe and its carbon, said David Baker, a postdoctoral fellow at CSU.

It's a great improvement from the system that employs 100 people around the planet to grab a jar full of air each week and ship it to a lab for testing.

"Instead of 100 measures a week, we'll have 100,000 measurements a day," Denning said.

The OCO satellite data could influence policy down the road.

In a few years, the satellite data can state with certainty that, say, the melting permafrost in Canada and Siberia is sending much bigger amounts of carbon into the atmosphere than it did 20 years ago, Baker said.

"That could give more impetus to control global warming," he said.

The data also could find that the Amazonian rain forest is doing a yeoman's task of absorbing fossil fuels from millions of cars, fireplaces and coal plants.

"That finding would make it all the more important not to cut down the forests," Baker said.

The instrument will find "sources," which are places that are losing their ability to absorb carbon - deforested farmland, warmer seas, areas devastated by forest fires or pine beetles.

And the instrument will find "sinks," spots on the globe that absorb immense amounts of carbon dioxide, keeping it from causing trouble - healthy forests, icy stretches of polar oceans.

Many scientists worry that the carbon sinks will lose their capacity to take up carbon in the coming years.

"We have to understand how the sinks work so we can anticipate when the climate might start changing much faster than it's already changing," Denning said. "OCO is going to let us do that."

scanlon@RockyMountainNews.com or 303-954-2897

Comments

  • February 21, 2009

    5:20 a.m.

    Suggest removal

    redchief65 writes:

    Are there any plans to factor the Sun's activity into these measurments??

  • February 21, 2009

    7:39 a.m.

    Suggest removal

    squeakywheel writes:

    What a waste since no matter what the real data finds, the "scientists" will manipluate it to justify their cause in order to keep funding, and hopefully increase it.

    Best way to control harmful carbon emissions is to get these politicians to shut up.

  • February 21, 2009

    10:38 p.m.

    Suggest removal

    dgroves writes:

    Really? I are we still on this global warming kick? It's so passee already. Remember when AIDS in Africa was trendy? Time to move on. I can't wait to see what's next!