14B.1 New Observations from the NASA TROPICS Constellation Mission in the Atlantic and Eastern Pacific Basins

Thursday, 9 May 2024: 10:45 AM
Beacon A (Hyatt Regency Long Beach)
William J. Blackwell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA; and R. V. Leslie, A. B. Milstein, G. Perras, M. Pieper, N. Zorn, S. A. Braun, C. S. Velden, C. Kidd, T. Matsui, M. J. Kim, T. Greenwald, J. D. Hawkins, D. C. Herndon, R. Bennartz, M. DeMaria, G. Chirokova, J. P. Dunion, F. D. Marks Jr., ScD, R. F. Rogers, K. E. Ryan, B. Annane, G. R. Alvey III, B. A. Dahl, and K. Cahoy

The four NASA TROPICS Earth Venture (EVI-3) CubeSat constellation satellites were successfully launched into orbit on May 8 and May 25, 2023. TROPICS is now providing nearly all-weather observations of 3-D temperature and humidity, as well as cloud ice and precipitation horizontal structure, at high temporal resolution to conduct high-value science investigations of tropical cyclones. TROPICS is providing rapid-refresh microwave measurements (median refresh rate of approximately 60 minutes for the baseline mission) over the tropics that can be used to observe the thermodynamics of the troposphere and precipitation structure for storm systems at the mesoscale and synoptic scale over the entire storm lifecycle. The TROPICS constellation mission comprises four 3U CubeSats (5.4 kg each) in two low-Earth orbital planes inclined at approximately 33 degrees with a 550-km altitude. Each CubeSat comprises a Blue Canyon Technologies bus and a high-performance radiometer payload to provide temperature profiles using seven channels near the 118.75 GHz oxygen absorption line, water vapor profiles using three channels near the 183 GHz water vapor absorption line, imagery in a single channel near 90 GHz for precipitation measurements (when combined with higher resolution water vapor channels), and a single channel at 205 GHz that is more sensitive to precipitation-sized ice particles. TROPICS spatial resolution and measurement sensitivity is comparable with current state-of-the-art observing platforms. Data is downlinked to the ground via the KSAT-Lite ground network with latencies better than one hour. NASA's Earth System Science Pathfinder (ESSP) Program Office approved the separate TROPICS Pathfinder mission, which launched into a sun-synchronous orbit on June 30, 2021, in advance of the TROPICS constellation mission as a technology demonstration and risk reduction effort. The TROPICS Pathfinder mission continues to yield useful data after 30+ months of operation and has provided an opportunity to checkout and optimize all mission elements prior to the primary constellation mission. Furthermore, Pathfinder has been filling in for one of the four constellation vehicles which has experienced on-orbit anomalies that the team is hopeful can be corrected soon. This presentation will describe the on-orbit results for the TROPICS constellation+Pathfinder mission and discuss recent activities to improve the data latency and generation of near-real-time products for forecasting applications.
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