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Mission Profile: Orbit & Coverage

TES target locations Orbit

The Aura satellite orbits 438 miles (705 km) from Earth's surface. Its inclination (the angle between the orbit plane and the equator plane) is 98.21�. The orbit is sun-synchronous with a 1:43 PM ascending node.

Target Size

One of the features of a Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) is that it readily supports an imaging mode, which, in turn, improves collection efficiency compared with the more traditional spatially scanning systems. TES employs 1 X 16 linear arrays, each of whose individual field of view is 0.75 X 7.5 mrad (see plot below).

Limb and Nadir Projections (click to enlarge)
(click to enlarge)

At the trailing limb, some 3100 km distant, these values translate to spatial resolutions of 2.3 km vertically and 23 km horizontally. Since the same arrays are used in nadir (705-km range), the projections become 0.5 km in-track and 5 km cross-track at the Earth's surface.

TES Viewing Geometries (click to enlarge)
(click to enlarge)

Nadir View

The nadir mode is able to look at an area approximately 5.3 km x 8.3 km (3.3 x 5.2 miles) with a spectral resolution of 0.1 cm-1 (low-resolution mode). TES is a pointable instrument and can access any target within 45 degrees of the local vertical and produce regional transects up to 885 km in length without any gaps in coverage.

Limb View

The TES limb mode is able to look at an area approximately 26 km x 41.8 km (16.2 x 25.9 miles) with a spectral resolution of 0.025 cm-1 (high resolution mode). In the limb mode, TES has a height resolution of 2.3 km, with coverage from 0 to 33 km.

This plot (and the other polar view plot) shows an example of ground targets for a TES global survey period of 16-orbit (~26 hours). Each observation sequence consists of four ground locations, two co-located nadir targets and three limb tangents projected to the ground.

Animations for TES global survey 16-orbit target ground locations:

These two animations, a rectangle view (QuickTime Movie, 100MB) and a hemisphere view (QuickTime Movie, 60MB), illustrate the target locations for a TES global survey period of 16 orbits. To view the QuickTime Movies, you may need to download free Apple QuickTime player.



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