Title :
The NPOESS Preparatory Project Science Data Segment: Brief Overview
Author :
Schweiss, Robert J. ; Ho, Evelyn ; Ullman, Richard ; Samadi, Shahin
Author_Institution :
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD
fDate :
July 31 2006-Aug. 4 2006
Abstract :
The NPOESS Preparatory Project (NPP) provides remotely-sensed land, ocean, atmospheric, ozone, and sounder data that will serve the meteorological and global climate change scientific communities while also providing risk reduction for the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS), the U.S. Government´s future low-Earth orbiting satellite system monitoring global weather and environmental conditions. NPOESS is a joint mission of three federal agencies, NASA, NOAA, and DoD. NASA´s primary science role in NPP is to independently assess the quality of the NPP science and environmental data records for climate research. Such assessment is critical for making NPOESS products the best that they can be for operational use and ultimately for climate studies. The Science Data Segment (SDS) supports science assessment by assuring the timely provision of NPP data to NASA´s science teams organized by climate measurement themes. The SDS breaks down into nine major elements, an input element that receives data from the operational agencies and acts as a buffer, a calibration analysis element, five elements devoted to measurement based quality assessment, an element used to test algorithmic improvements, and an element that provides overall science direction. This paper will describe how the NPP SDS will leverage on NASA experience to provide a mission-reliable research capability for science assessment of NPP derived measurements.
Keywords :
artificial satellites; atmospheric techniques; climatology; environmental factors; information services; meteorology; remote sensing; NASA; NOAA; NPOESS Preparatory Project; NPOESS products; NPP SDS; NPP Science Data Segment; NPP environmental data quality; NPP science data assessment; NPP science data quality; National Polar orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System; US Department of Defenese; global climate change community; global environmental condition monitoring; global weather monitoring; low Earth orbiting satellite system; meteorological community; mission reliable research capability; remotely sensed data; risk reduction; Condition monitoring; Extraterrestrial measurements; Government; Meteorology; NASA; Oceans; Remote sensing; Risk management; Satellites; Sea measurements;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2006. IGARSS 2006. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Denver, CO
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9510-7
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2006.332