| February
26, 2004
Laser-Sharp Eyes Watching Earth's
Polar Regions Change
ICESat laser validated
to five-inch accuracy
By Mario Aguilera
A spaceborne
laser instrument has taken a significant leap forward on its
way to helping scientists answer a handful of important questions
about Earth's surface.
In results scientists
are calling "spectacular," a team led by Jean-Bernard
Minster of Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University
of California, San Diego, has verified the ultra-high precision
of the instrument, the Geoscience Laser Altimeter System, or
GLAS, aboard the NASA satellite ICESat (Ice, Cloud and land
Elevation Satellite).
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Researchers
at the Salar de Uyuni |
Launched a year ago,
ICESat and the GLAS data it is transmitting to researchers are
helping determine how levels of Earth's polar ice sheets and
glaciers are changing. The ICESat mission is designed to provide
valuable information on important issues such as climate change
and its impact on the polar regions.
On Feb. 11, Scripps
researcher Helen Amanda Fricker and graduate student Adrian
Borsa at the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Institute of Geophysics
and Planetary Physics at Scripps calibrated the accuracy of
GLAS's ability to measure the height of Earth's surface to within
five inches, a remarkable agreement with precise surface readings
(the so-called "ground truth"). The accuracy is especially
impressive, the scientists say, given that the satellite travels
nearly 400 miles above the surface at more than 16,000 miles
per hour.
During each orbital
pass of ICESat, the GLAS instrument fires laser pulses (not
harmful to eyes) towards Earth at a rate of 40 pulses per second
using a technology called lidar, (light detection and ranging).
Since ICESat's launch in January 2003, several hundred million
laser shots have been fired. By measuring the precise time it
takes for the laser pulses to bounce back to the satellite,
GLAS can detect its distance from Earth's surface.
Combining this with
knowledge of the exact location of ICESat in its orbit (to about
one inch), and the direction of the laser beam (to better than
a thousandth of a degree), determined by the Center for Space
Research (CSR) at the University of Texas at Austin, the height
of the surface of Earth can be calculated. That information
will be used to carefully calculate changes in Earth's surface
elevation over time.
But in order to achieve
that level of precision, Minster's group and their colleagues
on the ICESat team have been working to demonstrate that GLAS's
readings are indeed as accurate as they were designed to be.
The "ultimate" calibration standard for the team is
a set of Global Positioning System (GPS) data collected in 2002
in the Bolivian Andes on a giant salt flat called the Salar
de Uyuni, one of the largest flat surfaces on Earth. Here Fricker,
Borsa and others carefully mapped extremely precise GPS readings
of a region so flat that the total range of elevations over
a 60-by-60-mile area is less than three feet.
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|
Adrian
Borsa at the Salar
de Uyuni |
"Establishing
such calibration and validation areas for space-based instruments
represents a lot of painstaking work," said Borsa. For
comparison, surveying the Salar de Uyuni took weeks of preparation,
days of field work and months of data processing. ICESat passes
over the area in less than ten seconds.
The team's topographic
map of the Salar de Uyuni is thought to have an average accuracy
of an inch or better, and offers a standard that they hoped
could be approached by the readings from space. In the late
afternoon of Feb. 11, Fricker and Borsa's computer calculations
led to an uncannily close match between the Salar de Uyuni surface
GPS data and the space-borne GLAS data.
"These results
are simply spectacular," said Minster, a Scripps Institution
professor. "If they are repeatable by future measurements,
they show that this technology can indeed capture the minute
surface elevation changes we are looking for, particularly on
the ice sheets in reference to global climate change."
The first GLAS readings
over the Salar de Uyuni were obtained on Oct. 27, 2003, on a
crystal clear day with no clouds. A second pass was made three
weeks later on a cloudy day, and GLAS readings from that pass
confirmed and reinforced the accuracy estimated for the first
pass. Scientists are especially satisfied with results from
the second pass since it highlights the instrument's ability
to operate satisfactorily through moderate cloud cover.

"The ICESat height
estimate repeatability is impressive," said instrument
scientist James Abshire of NASA. "This is far better than
ever achieved before from space and is an outstanding result
for this early in the mission." Abshire supervised the
design and construction of the instrument at the NASA Goddard
Space Flight Center in the 1990s. CSR's Bob Schutz, the GLAS
science team leader, concurred. "The Uyuni result is a
significant contribution toward the characterization of the
GLAS instrument," he said.
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The
Salar de Uyuni Salt Flat |
Minster believes the
results help pave the way for research using ICESat data and
for future missions that require scientists to consistently
and precisely study the evolution of ice sheets and other features
over decades.
"We have gained
enormous confidence in our ability to achieve change detection,"
said Minster. "With the help of future missions over the
next decade or two we will be able to unravel seasonal and annual
variations of the surface from long-term trends associated with
climate change."
The initial concept
for GLAS was first proposed nearly 15 years ago. The new achievement
is the result of a long-term collaboration of scientists and
engineers from NASA, the University of Texas at Austin, the
University of Wisconsin, MIT, Scripps Institution and Ball Aerospace
Corp., from Boulder, Colo.
"I'm filled with
awe that the collaborative work of so many people and organizations
ultimately converged on this success," said Minster.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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