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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
July
Space shuttle Columbia's
last flight formed clouds over Antarctica
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Xinzhao
Chu, a research scientist at Illinois, is a co-author
of the paper to be published in the July issue of
the journal Geophysical Research Letters that calls
into question the role these clouds may play in monitoring
global climate change. |
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7/6/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
A burst of mesospheric cloud activity over Antarctica in January 2003
was caused by the exhaust plume of the space shuttle Columbia during
its final flight, reports a team of scientists who studied satellite
and ground-based data from three different experiments. The data also
call into question the role these clouds may play in monitoring global
climate change.
“Our analysis shows that the Columbia’s exhaust plume approached
the South Pole three days after launch,” said Michael H. Stevens,
a scientist at the Naval Research Laboratory and lead author of a paper
scheduled to be published in the July issue of the journal Geophysical
Research Letters. “The lower temperatures and high concentrations
of water vapor over Antarctica caused a significant increase in polar
mesospheric cloud activity.”
Polar mesospheric clouds are the highest on Earth, forming at an altitude
of about 52 miles. They normally form when temperatures fall below minus
125 degrees Celsius.
“Because the brightness, occurrence and range of the clouds have
been increasing, some scientists have suggested that these clouds are
indicators of global climate change,” said Xinzhao Chu, a research
scientist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a co-author
of the paper. “That role needs to be reconsidered, however, because
of the potential influence of water vapor in shuttle plumes.”
On Jan. 16, 2003, the Columbia lifted from Kennedy Space Center on its
final flight before the loss of the crew and orbiter 16 days later.
As with previous shuttle launches, the orbiter released about 400 tons
of water – the primary product of the liquid hydrogen and liquid
oxygen fuel – while flying nearly horizontally at an altitude
of 68 miles. The resulting plume was about 2 miles in diameter and about
650 miles long.
“The plume was detected and tracked by the Global Ultraviolet
Imager on NASA’s Thermosphere, Ionosphere, Mesosphere, Energetics
and Dynamics satellite,” Stevens said. “The GUVI images
reveal rapid movement of the shuttle plume toward the South Pole.”
At the Rothera Research Station in Antarctica, Chu was measuring upper
altitude iron densities and polar mesospheric clouds using a special
lidar system designed by Illinois and operated in collaboration with
the British Antarctic Survey. Three days after the launch, the lidar
detected iron in the atmosphere at altitudes much higher than usual.
“In addition to a persistent layer of iron near an altitude of
56 miles, produced from ablating meteoroids entering Earth’s atmosphere,
three anomalous iron features were found at altitudes between 64 and
71 miles,” Chu said. Too high to be caused by meteoroids, these
iron features originated in the shuttle plume, the researchers report,
and had been produced by the normal ablation of main engine components
during launch.
“Within the next two weeks we measured almost all of the polar
mesospheric clouds we were to see that season,” Chu said. “Only
four hours of cloud observations were recorded before mid-January. From
January 19-26, however, 18 hours of cloud observations were recorded.”
The increase in polar mesospheric clouds was also observed with the
Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet instrument on the NOAA-16 satellite.
Additional evidence that the shuttle plume was responsible for the burst
of cloud activity can be found in the mesopause temperature, inferred
from the iron observations near an altitude of 56 miles, the researchers
report. At Rothera, the mesopause temperature was minus 120 degrees
Celsius, which is too warm for polar mesospheric clouds to form under
typical water vapor concentrations. By dumping so much water vapor into
the mesosphere, the shuttle raised the concentration enough to allow
the clouds to form.
“Our data will force scientists to rethink the role of polar mesospheric
clouds in monitoring global climate change,” Stevens said. “Any
interpretation of recent trends in cloud activity must consider the
potential influence of the space shuttle program.”
Co-authors of the paper with Stevens and Chu are Robert R. Meier at
George Mason University, Matthew T. DeLand at Science Systems and Applications
Inc., and John M.C. Plane at the University of East Anglia in England.
The National Science Foundation, NASA and the Office of Naval Research
supported this work.
Editor’s note: To reach Xinzhao Chu, call 217-333-3172; e-mail:
xchu@uiuc.edu.
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