Aeolus space laser catches a following wind:;
Europe’s Aeolus space laser mission,
which is designed to make unprecedented maps of Earth’s winds, has
reached a long-awaited key milestone.
Engineers at
Airbus in the UK have finally managed to bolt together all the elements of the satellite after overcoming major technical challenges.
Aeolus is now set for several months of testing before being sent into orbit next year.
That will be 10 years on from the originally envisaged launch date.
“It’s been a long time coming but it’s a hugely important mission,” said Dr Ralph Cordey from Airbus.
“Operating
lasers in space is not easy, but I’m pleased we’ve persevered with this
technology in Europe because it has many potential applications, not
just in measuring the wind."
The European Space Agency (Esa) has stuck with the project because of the nature of the data it will return.
It promises to give a big filip to weather forecasting. Even with the delays to the programme, the meteorological agencies
still regard its information as a priority.
Aeolus carries a laser Doppler lidar, called Aladin, that will probe
down through the atmosphere to see which way the wind is blowing and how
fast.
Today, we have multiple ways of measuring the wind, from
whirling anemometers and balloons to satellites that infer wind
behaviour by tracking cloud movement or sensing the choppiness of the
seas.
But these are somewhat limited indications, telling us what is happening in particular places or at particular heights.
Aeolus,
on the other hand, will attempt to build a global, 3D view of the way
the wind blows on Earth, from the surface of the planet all the way up
through the troposphere into the stratosphere (from 0km to 30km).
The
models used to forecast tomorrow’s weather will clearly benefit from
this, but so too will the simulations that investigate future climate
scenarios.
Circling the globe, the satellite’s ultraviolet beam will pulse the air below it.
The
time taken for the light to scatter back off molecules, dust and
moisture particles will reveal where the big wind streams are in the
atmosphere.
Small shifts in the frequency of the light will betray
the speed at which those various markers - and the winds that carry
them - are moving.
The concept is well established. Lasers like
this are routinely fired into the sky from the ground to retrieve
similar data at a single location.
The difficulty for Aeolus team
has been in developing an instrument that will work in space. Esa
approved the mission back in 1999 and
contracted industry to start building it in 2003. That’s when the trouble started.
Installing a flush
The first problem was in finding diodes to generate a laser source with a long enough lifetime to make the mission worthwhile.
With
that fixed, the mission looked in great shape until engineers
discovered their laser system could not work in a vacuum - a significant
barrier for a space mission. Tests revealed that in the absence of air,
the laser was degrading its own optics.
“Inside the instrument there are over 100 optical surfaces - lenses
and mirrors to prepare the laser beam - and they were becoming
contaminated,” explained Aeolus Airbus project manager Richard Wimmer.
“There
were two sources of contamination. If there were particles on the
optical surfaces, the laser would burn them and blacken the surfaces.
But the laser was also dragging particles on to the surfaces that were
outgassing from the spacecraft.”
The solution was to introduce a
means to flush Aladin with oxygen at a very gentle rate. Its
implementation has, of course, elongated the programme and added
significant extra cost.
What was supposed to have been a €300m mission is now estimated at €450m.
'We'll be ready'
For
many years, I would pass through the Airbus cleanroom in Stevenage and
see the spacecraft bus - that part of the satellite which holds its
computers, avionics, fuel tanks, and the like - sitting idly in the
corner, waiting on experts in Italy (Leonardo) and France (Airbus) to
solve the instrument issues.
But on Thursday, the British
engineers were finally able to lower a completed Aladin laser instrument
- together with the telescope it will use to spy the scattered light
signal - on to the rest of the satellite.
The spacecraft must now undergo a series of tests prior to riding its Vega rocket into orbit next year.
Richard
Wimmer has stayed with Aeolus throughout its trials and tribulations
and was clearly delighted to see the full satellite come together.
“It’s
one of those bizarre things where you wait and wait and wait, and then
it comes and it seems like just another event. But it’s a major
milestone for sure because now we’re on a more standard assembly,
integration and testing sequence.
“We’ve got one very important
and complex procedure to do in Liège in Belgium, where as well as
putting the satellite in a thermal vacuum chamber we’ll also operate the
whole instrument system and measure its performance. Then we’ll be
ready.”
For Europe, Aeolus is an important step. The hard lessons learned are being applied to
the next Esa laser mission called Earthcare, which will study the role clouds and atmospheric particles play in a changing climate.
But
having this technology opens up other possibilities as well, such as
making very precise surface height measurements. The Americans, for
example, have done this with ice sheets and forest canopies.
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