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In Photos: SpaceX Launches Water-Monitoring Satellite for NASA and CNES

SpaceX,NASA,CNES
Pauline Acalin
December 20, 202210:00 PM UTC (UTC +0)

Pauline Acalin for Supercluster

Early Friday morning, December 16th, SpaceX launched the Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite for NASA and French space agency CNES that will survey nearly all the water on Earth. The mission includes contributions from the Canadian Space Agency and the UK Space Agency.

Pauline Acalin sets up remote pad cameras for Supercluster

SWOT launched atop SpaceX's Falcon 9 from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California and will complete its primary mission over the next three years. According to NASA, the satellite's instruments will measure the height of water in freshwater bodies and the ocean on more than 90% of our planet's surface using instruments that will provide higher-resolution images than previous missions.

The collected data will help inform water equity and water management policy from local to national levels, add to the knowledge of Earth's water and energy cycles and help prepare cities, towns, and communities across the world for rising seas.

Photographer Pauline Acalin was on-site for Supercluster at Vandenberg to shoot the launch of the critical science mission.

Pauline Acalin for Supercluster

“For freshwater, this will be a quantum leap in terms of our knowledge,” said Daniel Esteban-Fernandez, KaRIn instrument manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. "Researchers currently have good data on only a few thousand lakes around the world; SWOT will increase that number to at least a million."

According to JPL, KaRIn will measure the height of water in the ocean, “seeing” features like currents and eddies that are less than 13 miles (20 kilometers) across – up to 10 times smaller than those detectable with other sea-level satellites. It will also collect data on lakes and reservoirs larger than 15 acres (62,500 square meters) and rivers wider than 330 feet (100 meters) across.

Pauline Acalin for Supercluster

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Engineers examine an engine issue on Falcon 9 by Pauline Acalin for Supercluster

   

“Warming seas, extreme weather, more severe wildfires –these are only some of the consequences humanity is facing due to climate change,”

Pauline Acalin for Supercluster

said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “The climate crisis requires an all-hands-on-deck approach, and SWOT is the realization of a long-standing international partnership that will ultimately better equip communities so that they can face these challenges.”

 
 

Falcon 9 liftoff and landing streak by Pauline Acalin for Supercluster

Pauline Acalin For Supercluster

The SWOT Falcon 9 after delivering its payload to orbit by Pauline Acalin For Supercluster

Pauline Acalin For Supercluster

Pauline Acalin
December 20, 202210:00 PM UTC (UTC +0)