Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite

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Organization NASA
Major Contractors Lockheed-Martin
Mission Type Earth Observation
Satellite of Earth
Launch September 15, 1991 from Space Shuttle
Mission Duration September 15, 1991–present
Mass 5,900 kg
Webpage http://umpgal.gsfc.nasa.gov/
Orbital elements
Semimajor Axis 600 lm
Inclination 57°
Orbital Period 95.9 minutes
Instruments
Cryogenic Limb Array Etalon Spectrometer (CLAES) Determines concentrations and distributions of gasses in atmosphere
Improved Stratospheric and Mesospheric Sounder (ISAMS) Creates a temperature profile of the middle atmosphere
Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) Create vertical profiles of atmospheric gasses, temperature, pressure and cloud ice
Halogen Occultation Experiment (HALOE) Profile the middle atmosphere composition and temperature
High Resolution Doppler Imager (HRDI) Uses Doppler shift to determine horizontal winds
Wind Imaging Interferometer (WINDII) Senses temperature and winds in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere
Solar Ultraviolet Spectral Irradiance Monitor (SUSIM) Measures the absolute irradiance of the solar ultraviolet (UV) light
Solar/Stellar Irradiance Comparison Experiment (SOLSTICE) (characteristics)
Particle Environment Monitor (PEM) (characteristics)
Active Cavity Radiometer Irradiance Monitor (ACRIM II) (characteristics)

The Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) is an orbital observatory whose mission is to study the Earth's atmosphere, particularly the protective ozone layer.

The 5900 kg (13,000 lb) satellite was launched during Space Shuttle mission STS-48 in 1991. The original mission life was to be three years. As of June of 2005, six of the ten instruments are still operational. UARS orbits at an altitude of 375 miles with an orbital inclination of 57 degrees.

Contents

Chemical studies instruments

Cryogenic Limb Array Etalon Spectrometer (CLAES)

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Cutaway view of the CLAES instrument

CLAES is a spectrometer that determines the concentrations and distributions of nitrogen and chlorine compounds, ozone, water vapor and methane. It does this by inferring the amount of gases in the atmosphere by measuring the unique infrared signature of each gas.

In order to differentiate the relatively weak signature of trace gases from the background radiation in the atmosphere, CLAES had to have high resolution and sensitivity. To acheive this, the instrument combined a telescope with an infrared spectrometer. The whole instrument was cryogenically cooled to keep heat from the instrument from interfering with the readings. The cryogenics system consists of an inner tank of solid neon at −257 °C (−430 °F) and an outer tank of solid carbon dioxide at −150 °C (−238 °F). As the neon and carbon dioxide evaporated, they kept the instrument cool. The final cryogens evaporated from the instrument on May 5, 1993 and the instrument warmed up ending it's useful life.

The instrument looked sideways out of the UARS platform to allow the instrument to look through the stratosphere and the lower mesosphere. CLAES produced a 19-month global database showing the vertical distributions of important ozone-layer gases in the stratosphere and their variation with time of day, season, latitude, and longitude.

Improved Stratospheric and Mesospheric Sounder (ISAMS)

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Cutaway view of the ISAMS

ISAMS is an infrared radiometer for measuring thermal emission from the Earth's limb (the line of the horizon as seen from UARS). The instrument created a vertical profile of temperature from the tropopause to the mesopause. This instrument operated from September 1991-July 1992.

Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS)

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The MLS instrument before instalation in the UARS spacecraft

The MLS detects naturally occuring microwave thermal emissions from Earth's limb to create vertical profiles of atmospheric gasses, temperature, pressure and cloud ice. MLS looks 90° from the angle of UARS orbit.

Thermal radiation enters the instrument through a three-mirror antenna system. The antenna mechanically scans in the vertical plane through the atmospheric limb every 65.5 seconds. The scan covers a height range from the surface up to 90 km (55 miles). Upon entering the instrument, the signal from the antenna is seperated into three signals for processing by differnt radiometers. The 63GHz radiometer measures temperature and pressure. The 183 GHz radiometer measures water vapor and ozone. The 205 GHz radiometer measures ClO, ozone, sulphur dioxide, nitric acid and water vapor.

As of June 2005, the 63 and 205 GHz radiometers are operational. The 183 GHz radiometer failed after 19 months of operation.

Halogen Occultation Experiment (HALOE)

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Diagram of the HALOE instrument

HALOE uses solar occultation to measure simultaenous vertical profiles of Ozone (O₃), Hydrogen Chloride (HCl), Hydrogen Fluoride (HF), Methane (CH₄), Water Vapor (H₂O), Nitric oxide (NO), Nitrogen Dioxide (NO₂), Temperature, Aerosol Extinction, Aerosol composition and size distribution versus atmospheric pressure at the Earth's limb. The measurements are done at 4 different lengths of infrared across a 1.6 km (1.0 mile) wide field of view of Earth's limb.

A vertical scan of the atmosphere is obtained by tracking the sun during occultation. The scan will measure the amount of solar energy absorbed by gasses in the atmosphere.

In order to support scanning, the instrument comes in two parts, the optics unit on a two-axis gimbal and a fixed electronics unit. The optics unit contains a telescope that collects solar energy as well as the gas detectors. The electronics unit handles data, motor control and power for the instrument.

Dynamics instruments

High Resolution Doppler Imager (HRDI)

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Diagram of the HRDI instrument

HRDI observes the emission and absorption lines of molecular oxygen above the limb of the Earth, uses the Doppler shift of the lines to determine horizontal winds and uses the line shapes and strengths to obtain information about temperature and atmospheric make-up.

The instrument consists of two parts, the telescope and the interferometer which consists of an optical bench and support electronics.

The telesope uses a narrow field of view to prevent Doppler shift variation across the field of view from distorting the results. Input from the telescope is fed to the processor via a fiber optic cable.

HRDI has been turned off since April 17, 1995 due to a problem with the spacecraft's solar array.

Wind Imaging Interferometer (WINDII)

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Diagram of the WINDII instrument

The WINDII instrument measures wind, temperature and emission rate from airglow and aurora. The instrument looks at Earth's limb from two different angles, 45 degrees and 135 degrees off the spacecraft's angle of motion. This allows the instrument to read the same areas of the sky from two angles within a few minutes of the previous reading.

The instument consists of an interferometer which feeds to a CCD camera. The two telescopes (45 degrees and 135 degrees) each have a one meter long baffle tube to reduce stray light during daytime viewing. The input from the telescopes is positioned side-by-side on the CCD so both views are imaged simultaneously.

Energy inputs instruments

Solar Ultraviolet Spectral Irradiance Monitor (SUSIM)

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Diagram of the SUSIM instrument

SUSIM measures ultraviolet (UV) emissions from the sun. The obhservations are made both through vaccuum and through occultations of the sun through the atmosphere. This allows a comparison of the amount of UV light that reaches the earth and the amount abosorbed by the upper atmosphere.

Due to the nature of measuring UV intensity, instrument degredation is a major issue. To help with this problem, the instrument contains two identical spectrometers. One will is used almost coniuously during the daylight portion of UARS' orbit. The second is used infrequently to verify the sensitivity of the first.

Stellar Irradiance Comparison Experiment (SOLSTICE)


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