NASA's Newest Wind Watcher Arrives at Launch Site

A new NASA Earth-observing mission that will measure ocean winds from the International Space Station has arrived at NASAs Kennedy Space Center in Florida to begin final preparations for launch.

The International Space Station (ISS)-RapidScat scatterometer instrument arrived May 12 after a cross-country trip from NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California. The instrument, built at JPL, now will undergo final tests before being stowed aboard a SpaceX Dragon commercial cargo resupply spacecraft. The Dragon will launch on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, no earlier than August.

ISS-RapidScat is NASA's first scientific Earth-observing instrument specifically designed and developed to operate from the exterior of the space station. It will measure near-surface ocean wind speed and direction in Earths low and middle latitudes during its two-year mission. Its data will be used to support weather and marine forecasting, including tracking storms and hurricanes, as well as climate studies.

Winds over the ocean are a critical factor in determining regional weather patterns and studying climate. High winds in severe storms also can inflict major damage to shore populations and shipping. In some regions, ocean winds drive warm surface ocean waters away from coastlines, causing nutrient-rich deep water to rise to the surface, where they provide a major source of food for coastal fisheries. Changes in ocean winds also help us monitor large-scale changes in Earths climate variations, such as El Nino and La Nina.

Since 1999, NASAs QuikScat satellite, along with satellites operated by international partners, has provided ocean surface winds information for use by the science and operational weather forecasting communities. In 2009, after 10 years of successful operations, QuikScats scatterometer instrument stopped providing ocean wind data.

Scatterometers are radar sensors that bounce microwaves off the ocean surface and measure the strength and direction of the echoes that return. The echoes are scattered by the presence of wind-driven waves on the ocean surface. ISS-RapidScat will help fill the gap left by the loss of these data and will extend a 15-year ocean wind climate record.

ISS-RapidScats berth on the space station will put it in an orbit that is unique from any other wind-measuring instrument currently in space. This orbit, with an altitude that varies from 233 to 270 miles (375 to 435 kilometers), will give scientists the first near-global direct observations of how ocean winds vary over the course of the day, while adding extra eyes in the tropics and midlatitudes to track the formation and movement of tropical cyclones. Its 560-mile-wide (900-kilometer) observation swath creates a map of winds over most of the ocean between 51.6 degrees north and south of the equator every 48 hours. ISS-RapidScat also will extend the continuity and usefulness of the scatterometer data record from the international constellation of ocean wind satellites. Currently, satellites in the constellation observe at different times of the day. Using the space stations orbit, it will be possible for ISS-RapidScat to observe areas where the orbits of the other scatterometers in the constellation intersect at the same time. This capacity will allow scientists to correct for previously unknown relative errors between the different wind satellites and extend QuikScats 10-plus-year record to create a continuous record.

ISS-RapidScat was developed in just a year-and-a-half, at roughly one-tenth the cost of developing a traditional satellite mission. Its development approach leverages space station capabilities and a combination of new industrial-grade hardware and older inherited hardware used to develop and test QuikScat. Additional cost savings are achieved by launching the instrument aboard a scheduled space station cargo resupply mission.

After arriving at the space station, ISS-RapidScat will be installed on the external payload facility on the Columbus module using the stations robotic arm. The arm will be controlled from the ground during installation. ISS-RapidScat is an autonomous payload, requiring no interaction from station crew members.

ISS-RapidScat is a partnership between JPL and the International Space Station Program Office at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, with support from the Earth Science Division of NASAs Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Other mission partners include Kennedy; NASAs Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama; the European Space Agency; and SpaceX. JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

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NASA's Newest Wind Watcher Arrives at Launch Site

NASA Ranked High in J.D. Powers Inaugural Social Media Study of Government

NASA ranked high in the J.D. Power 2014 Social Media Benchmark Study: Government, released Thursday. In the two focus areas measured, servicing and marking engagement, J.D. Power reports, "Among the government agencies included in the study, only the National Aeronautics and Space Administration performs particularly well in both types of social interactions.

Increasingly, more and more people are getting their news from online sources, and we strive to share our story of exploration and discovery with the public through these digital channels, including social media, said David Weaver, associate administrator for Communications at NASA Headquarters in Washington. As NASA embarks on missions to go farther in space than ever before, we will look for new ways to engage the public and share the experience.

NASA has been at the forefront of social media since 2008, when the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) created the agencys first Twitter account, @MarsPhoenix, for the Mars Phoenix Lander. NASA has since grown and expanded its digital footprint to more than 480 accounts spread across 10 different social media platforms that consistently communicate the agencys mission and engage with followers around the world.

NASA maintains strong presences on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Instagram and other popular platforms. The @NASA Twitter account and NASAs Instagram account are the most followed in the federal government on those platforms.

NASA Socials, formerly known as NASA Tweetups, have brought thousands of people who engage with the agency via social media together for unique in-person experiences of exploration and discovery. Since 2009, NASA has hosted 80 NASA Socials at more than a dozen locations. Attendees have had the opportunity to witness space shuttle launches, spacecraft launches to the moon, Jupiter and Mars, fly an F/A-18 flight simulator and rub elbows with astronauts and NASAs administrator.

NASA Social participants go behind the scenes at NASA facilities, take photos, ask questions and share the experience with their social media followers. Other events have embedded these participants into media events at NASA and given them the same access as professional journalists.

NASA has won three consecutive Shorty Awards for the best government use of social media. The Shorty Awards also recognized NASA's @MarsCuriosity account as Foursquare Mayor of the Year. In addition, the agency won in 2009 for its use of Twitter for the Mars Phoenix Lander mission, and astronaut Doug Wheelock was awarded the Real Time Photo of the Year in 2011 for his "Moon from Space" picture. NASA now has six total Shorty Awards.

In 2013, NASA was also recognized in Forbes Magazine and on Mashable as the 8th most engaged brand on Twitter as calculated by Nestivity, a community engagement platform for Twitter. Also in 2013, NASAs Mars Curiosity won the SXSW Interactive award for a campaign that creatively connects and shares the experience on social media.

Additionally, NASA's social media team received the Space Foundation's Douglas S. Morrow Public Outreach Award in 2012, which is presented annually to an individual, team or organization that has made significant contributions to public awareness and understanding of space programs.

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NASA Ranked High in J.D. Powers Inaugural Social Media Study of Government

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NASA Plans Mars Sample-Return Rover

Planetary geologists are set to narrow down a list of landing sites for a mission set for 2020

Credit: JPL/NASA

NASAs Curiosity rover is in the prime of its life, exploring the rocks, soil and air of Mars. But the agency is already planning its successor and this time, the scientific stakes are higher.

On 14 May, planetary geologists will gather in a hotel near Arlington, Virginia, to begin hammering out where NASA might send its next Mars rover, set to launch in 2020. The plan is to build a machine that is nearly identical to Curiosity, and equip it with fresh instruments to probe the Martian surface.

Although NASA has yet to finalize details, the next rover will almost certainly have a hugely important, unprecedented job: to collect and store rocks and soil for a future spacecraft to bring back to Earth. It would be the first ever sample return from Mars.

The next 20 years of Mars exploration hinges on where this rover goes, says Philip Christensen, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University in Tempe. It has to tell us something fundamental about the broader history of Mars.

NASAs workshop this week will discuss possible landing sites. Many look familiar: they were on the longlist of sites for Curiositys landing in 2012. Such locations include Mawrth Vallis, an ancient valley strewn with minerals formed in water, which would help with the rovers main goal of finding and exploring environments that could once have been suitable for life. The European Space Agency is also considering the site for its ExoMars rover, which will launch in 2018 (seeNature508,1920; 2014).

Other possibilities for 2020 include several ancient, now-dry lakes and deltas where flowing water once laid down sediment. These areas, including Eberswalde Crater, were among the top candidates for the Curiosity mission. They were passed over in favour of Gale Crater, where the rover is laboriously trekking towards a 5-kilometer-high mountain of sediments. Curiosity has yet to detect concentrated amounts of organic material, but the rich river-laid sediments in Eberswalde are likely to offer that bounty, says geologist Ross Irwin of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC.

The 2020 rover will also have the crucial extra task of collecting samples. Scientists have talked for decades about getting their hands on Martian rocks to look for signs of past life. They have studied meteorites that originated on Mars, but no space agency has yet been able to bring back samples directly, in part because of the cost and in part because of technical failures (seeNature479,275276; 2011).

NASAs plan for bringing back Martian samples would involve a succession of missions over many years (see Fetch!). Step one would need a rover to collect and store roughly 30 narrow cylinders of rock and soil, either on board or on the ground. In step two, an unmanned rocket would fly to Mars and deploy another rover to fetch the samples and then blast them into orbit. Step three would be to capture that orbiting package and fly it back to Earth.

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NASA Plans Mars Sample-Return Rover

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