Title: Earth Science and Applications from Space
1 Earth Science and Applications from
Space Update on the Decadal Study Berrien
Moore 25 August 2006
University of New Hampshire b.moore_at_unh.edu http
//qp.nas.edu/decadalsurvey
2Decadal Survey What is it?
- Charge--The study will generate consensus
recommendations from the Earth and environmental
science and applications community regarding
science priorities, opportunities afforded by new
measurement types and new vantage points, and a
systems approach to space-based and ancillary
observations that encompasses the research
programs of NASA and the related operational
programs of NOAA. - (emphasis added)
3Decadal Survey Specific Tasks
- Review the status of the field to assess recent
progress in resolving major scientific questions - Develop a consensus of the top-level scientific
questions that should provide the focus for Earth
and environmental observations in the period
2008-2020. - Take account of the principal federal- and
state-level users of these observations and
identify opportunities and challenges to the
exploitation of the data generated by Earth
observations from space.
4Decadal Survey Specific Tasks
- Recommend a prioritized list of measurements and
identify potential new space-based capabilities
and supporting activities within NASA and NOAA to
support national needs for research and
monitoring of the dynamic Earth system during the
decade 2008-2020. - Identify important directions that should
influence planning for the decade beyond 2020.
The committee will also give particular attention
to strategies for NOAA to evolve current
capabilities while meeting operational needs to
collect, archive, and disseminate high quality
data products.
5Decadal Survey Structure
- Executive Committee (Co-chairs) Rick Anthes
(UCAR) and Berrien Moore (UNH) - Seven Panels
- Earth Science Applications and Societal Needs
- Land-use Change, Ecosystem Dynamics, and
Biodiversity - Weather (including space weather and chemical
weather) - Climate Variability and Change
- Water Resources and the Global Hydrologic Cycle
- Human Health and Security
- Solid-Earth hazards, resources, and dynamics
6Decadal Survey Executive Committee
- Rick Anthes and Berrien Moore
- At Large Members
- Jim Anderson, Harvard University, atmospheric
science - Susan Cutter, Univ. of South Carolina, hazards
and risk - Bill Gail, Vexcel Corporation, Earth remote
sensing technology - Tony Hollingsworth, ECMWF, weather
- Kathie Kelly, Univ. of Washington, oceanography
- Neal Lane, Rice University, policy
- Bruce Marcus, (retired TRW), remote sensing
technology - Warren Washington, NCAR, numerical modeling of
climate - Mary Lou Zoback, U.S. Geological Survey, solid
Earth - Chairs on the Seven Panels
7Decadal Survey Panels
- Earth Science Applications and Societal Needs.
Chair Tony Janetos, Heinz Center Vice Chair
Roberta Balstad, Columbia University - Land-use Change, Ecosystem Dynamics, and
Biodiversity. Chair Ruth DeFries, U. Maryland
Vice Chair Otis Brown, U. Miami - Weather (incl. space weather and chemical
weather). Chair Susan Avery, U. Colorado Vice
Chair Tom Vonder Haar, Colorado State - Climate Variability and Change. Chair Eric
Barron, U Texas Vice Chair Joyce Penner, U.
Michigan - Water Resources and the Global Hydrologic Cycle.
Chair Dennis Lettenmaier, U. Washington Vice
Chair Anne Nolin, Oregon State - Human Health and Security. Chair Mark Wilson, U.
Michigan Vice Chair Rita Colwell, Canon USA - Solid-Earth hazards, resources, and dynamics.
Chair Brad Hager, MIT Vice Chair Sue Brantley,
Penn State
8Broad Context--Why Now
- NASA is nearing completion of the deployment of
the Earth Observing System (EOS) and is now
considering an appropriate strategy for follow-on
exploratory and systematic missions. - In the coming decade, NASA plans to transition a
number of environmental measurements from
research-oriented programs to operationally
oriented programs. - In the coming decade, the new NPOESS and GOES-R
will be used to monitor global environmental
conditions and collect and disseminate data
related to weather, atmosphere, oceans, land and
near-space environment. - The United States is leading the development of a
Global Earth Observation System of Systems
(GEOSS)
9Broad Context--Why Really Now (A view)
- It is needed--the government lacks an
over-arching strategy for Earth Observation
there are pieces via science programs such as the
Climate Change Science Program but no coherent,
overarching, broad(er), strategy. - Not only is the strategy missing but so is a
coherent and politically compelling rationale. - The needs to be a vehicle to bring the Earth
science community together in order to have its
views heard--it is often too diffuse to be
(politically) effective. - There are big problems in Earth Observation
everywhere
10Decadal Survey Schedule
- Community Meeting in Wood Hole August 2004
Framing the Study - Executive Committee met November 2004
- Town hall meetings at AGU (December 2004, San
Francisco)and AMS (January 2005 San Diego)
announcing Request for Information for potential
missions - 27 April 2005 Interim Report is delivered to
sponsors - Summer study August 2005 producing panel input
into a detailed outline - Executive Committee refine strategy and review
Panel progress October 2005 - December 2005 and January 2006 special sessions
at AGU and AMS to discuss progress - Executive Committee (plus) refine and begin to
interleave panel priorities January 2006 - Executive Committee (plus) interleave panel
priorities May 2006 - Executive Committee (plus) Final Report writing
August 2006 - October 2006 DRAFT Final report is delivered to
NRC for review - December 2006 Final Report is delivered to
Sponsors
11VISION
A healthy, secure, prosperous and sustainable
society for all people on Earth
Understanding the complex, changing planet on
which we live, how it supports life, and how
human activities affect its ability to do so in
the future is one of the greatest
intellectual challenges facing humanity. It is
also one of the most important for society as it
seeks to achieve prosperity and
sustainability. NRC (April 2005)
12Interim Report Issued 27 April 2005
Today, this system of environmental satellites
is at risk of collapse.
13Interim Report (April 2005)
- Overriding Concern Absence of Plans for Future
Research Missions (Mission Queue) - Consequences of canceled, descoped, and delayed
missions LDCM, OVWM, GIFTS, Glory (APS and TIM),
WSOA, and GPM - Delays in Explorer (Earth System Science
Pathfinder) line - Steps to ensure climate data records (via NPOESS)
- Technology base to support new missions, for
example - InSAR
- Wide-swath ocean altimetry
- Measurement from space of tropospheric winds
- Recommendations related to above
14Since the Interim Report
- Major problems with NPOESS
- Delays of several years
- Descoping and loss of one spacecraft-1030 orbit
- NASA terminates two more missions and delays
(with NOAAs help) 2 others - DSCOVR (Deep Space Climate Observatory)
- HYDROS
- GPM Delayed 2.5 years
- NPP Delayed 1.5 years
- RA cuts 15
- LandSat and Glory as Free-flyers
- A change in sign in the d/dt of the Earth
Sciences NASA budget (whew!)
15Some good news! (Plus GOES-N)
- Successful launch of COSMIC
- April 14, 2006
- Ionospheric electron density
- Stratospheric T
- Tropospheric T, water vapor
- Successful launch of Cloudsat
- /Calipso
- April 28, 2006
- Cloud-profiling radar
- Camera,LIDAR,
- Imaging IR radiometer
16Since the Interim Report
- A change in sign in the d/dt of the Earth
Sciences NASA budget (whew!)
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18NASA Earth Science Funding Past and Future
Projection
Prior
FY07 Request
Decadal Survey
Million
Missions
Non-Mission
Year
19Criteria for Prioritization
- Contributes to the most important scientific
questions facing Earth sciences today (scientific
merit-discovery, exploration) - Contributes to applications and policy making
(societal benefits) - Contributes to long-term observational record of
the Earth - Complements other observational systems,
including national and international plans - Affordable (cost considerations, either total
costs for mission or costs per year) - Degree of readiness (technical, resources,
people) - Risk mitigation and strategic redundancy (backup
of other critical systems) - Makes a significant contribution to more than one
thematic application or scientific discipline.
Above not in priority order
20Authorizing Language 2006
- "The conferees are aware that the National
Academy of Sciences is continuing to work on an
Earth Science and Applications from Space Decadal
Survey which is due to be completed in 2006. In
preparing the science plan, NASA should, to the
greatest extent possible, take into consideration
information available from the Decadal Survey.
The conferees expect NASA to notify the
authorizing committees if the completed Decadal
Survey would change any of the information
provided in the science plan."
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