As discussed in Will McCarty’s remarks, AOS is a key component of the Earth System Observatory that was recommended in the 2017 Decadal Survey. The mission will deliver transformative observations fundamental to understanding coupled aerosol– and cloud–precipitation processes that profoundly impact weather, climate, and air quality. Two AOS projects are in the mission concept and technology development phase (Phase-A): AOS-Storm (to launch late 2020s), with a Ku Doppler radar, microwave radiometers, and backscatter lidar in a 55° inclined orbit; and AOS-Sky (to launch early 2030s) with cloud-profiling Doppler radar, backscatter lidar, microwave radiometer, polarimeter, far infrared (IR) radiometer, and aerosol and moisture limb sounders in polar orbit. (This paragraph reflects what was discussed during the meeting, however, AOS is undergoing changes that will be reflected on the website at a later date.)
Related Posts
China’s Chang’e-6 Lands on Moon’s Far Side to Collect Samples
- admin
- March 10, 2024
- 3 min read
- 0
After touching down on the moon’s far side, China’s Chang’e-6 lander is collecting samples to […]
Elusive medium-size black holes may form in dense ‘birthing nests’
- admin
- August 23, 2023
- 4 min read
- 0
Researchers have discovered that elusive intermediate-mass black holes could form in dense star clusters containing […]
What Is the Council of Giants?
- admin
- January 15, 2024
- 11 min read
- 0
The Council of Giants within the Local Sheet. License: CC BY-SA 4.0.The Council of Giants […]
The secrets of supernovas might be locked in moon dust
- admin
- March 27, 2024
- 7 min read
- 0
The secrets of the supernova star explosions could be hidden in dust scattered across the […]