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PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, Ocean Ecosystem)

Viewing Posts from January 2024

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    People of PACE: Fred Huemmrich Plants the Seeds of Inspiration

    The image is a selfie of a bearded man seen from the shoulders up. He is wearing a dark green zip-up jacket, and also has glasses on. Behind him are scientific instruments, which look like long metal rods standing up as well as some buckets. In the far background is a grassy field and a clear blue sky.

    Fred Huemmrich is a member of NASA's Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) science and applications team and a research professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. What is your favorite atmosphere, land, or ocean related book or movie? "Dune." To be specific, I really liked the appendix of Dune which has the story …

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    NASA’s PACE Spacecraft Mated to Payload Adapter

    NASA's PACE spacecraft is fitted to the payload adapter.

    NASA and SpaceX technicians connected NASA's PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem) spacecraft to the payload adapter on Wednesday, Jan. 24, 2024, at the Astrotech Space Operations Facility near the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Now that PACE is securely attached to the payload adapter, teams will encapsulate the spacecraft inside the protective payload fairings …

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    People of PACE: Jeroen Rietjens Followed His Passions to SPEXone and PACE

    The image is focused in on a man to the left of the image wearing glasses and a blue and red short sleeved polo short. He wears a headset, where the wire is hanging down past the far side of his head. He is pointing at a computer screen which is in the background of the image. In front of him, but out of focus in the iamge are two other people, one sitting next to the man and one sitting across from him, closer to the camera. At the table they are sitting at are computers, coffee mugs, and water bottles.

    Jeroen Rietjens is an instrument scientist at the Netherlands Institute for Space Research (SRON) and worked on the SPEXone polarimeter. PACE's SPEXone instrument is a multi-angle polarimeter. It measures the intensity, degree and angle of linear polarization of sunlight reflected back from Earth's atmosphere, land surface, and ocean. What is your favorite atmosphere or ocean …

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    People of PACE: Natasha Sadoff Connects PACE Data to Benefit Society

    Natasha Sadoff is the deputy coordinator for the applications program and PACE. What is your favorite ocean or atmosphere related book or movie? Probably "The Little Mermaid." It's a whole other world with the wildlife (and mermaids) in their own kingdom, so it just makes the ocean very magical. What is your background? I'm a …

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    People of PACE: Jeremy Werdell is the PACE Mission Scientific Conscience

    A computer screen displays live readings of carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor concentrations. Scientists monitor readings from inside the Gulfstream’s small cabin.

    Jeremy Werdell is the project scientist for the PACE mission as well as a biological oceanographer in the Ocean Ecology Laboratory at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. What is your favorite ocean- or atmosphere-related book or movie? "Jaws!" And it's not close. "Jaws." Best movie, without question, ever made. What are you …

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    NASA Hosts Media Viewing of Spacecraft to Study Oceans, Clouds

    Media visit NASA's PACE spacecraft in a cleanroom.

    Members of the media viewed NASA's PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud ocean Ecosystem) spacecraft on Wednesday, Jan. 3, 2024, at the Astrotech Space Operations facility near the agency's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Subject matter experts from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA Headquarters in Washington, and the agency's Launch Services Program based at Kennedy provided …

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    Setting the Stage for PACE at AGU

    A man wearing glasses, a dark polo shirt, khakis and a nametag on a lanyard stands in front of a large display made of nine screens combined into one. On the screen is a visual showing PACE study areas, labelled on a schematic of the ocean, atmosphere and terrestrial ecosystems.

    After years of planning, building, and testing, 2024 is the PACE mission's time to shine: Launch is slated for February and the team is eagerly awaiting a wealth of ocean- and atmosphere-related data to dig into soon after. Several PACE scientists closed out 2023 by sharing this enthusiasm for the mission at the American Geophysical …

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