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Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The Geostationary Fourier Transform Spectrometer

Richard Key; Stanley P. Sander; Annmarie Eldering; J.-F. Blavier; Dmitriy Bekker; Kenneth S. Manatt; David M. Rider; Yen-Hung Wu

The Geostationary Fourier Transform Spectrometer (GeoFTS) is an imaging spectrometer designed for a geostationary orbit (GEO) earth science mission to measure key atmospheric trace gases and process tracers related to climate change and human activity. GEO allows GeoFTS to continuously stare at a region of the earth for frequent sampling to capture the variability of biogenic fluxes and anthropogenic emissions from city to continental spatial scales and temporal scales from diurnal, synoptic, seasonal to interannual. The measurement strategy provides a process based understanding of the carbon cycle from contiguous maps of carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), carbon monoxide (CO), and chlorophyll fluorescence (CF) collected many times per day at high spatial resolution (~2.7km×2.7km at nadir). The CO2/CH4/CO/CF measurement suite in the near infrared spectral region provides the information needed to disentangle natural and anthropogenic contributions to atmospheric carbon concentrations and to minimize uncertainties in the flow of carbon between the atmosphere and surface. The half meter cube size GeoFTS instrument is based on a Michelson interferometer design that uses all high TRL components in a modular configuration to reduce complexity and cost. It is self-contained and as independent of the spacecraft as possible with simple spacecraft interfaces, making it ideal to be a “hosted” payload on a commercial communications satellite mission. The hosted payload approach for measuring the major carbon-containing gases in the atmosphere from the geostationary vantage point will affordably advance the scientific understating of carbon cycle processes and climate change.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2011

A Panchromatic Imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer for the NASA Geostationary Coastal and Air Pollution Events Mission

Yen-Hung Wu; Richard Key; Stanley P. Sander; J.-F. Blavier; David M. Rider

This paper summarizes the design and development of the Panchromatic Imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (PanFTS) for the NASA Geostationary Coastal and Air Pollution Events (GEO-CAPE) Mission. The PanFTS instrument will advance the understanding of the global climate and atmospheric chemistry by measuring spectrally resolved outgoing thermal and reflected solar radiation. With continuous spectral coverage from the near-ultraviolet through the thermal infrared, this instrument is designed to measure pollutants, greenhouse gases, and aerosols as called for by the U.S. National Research Council Decadal Survey; Earth Science and Applications from Space: National Imperatives for the Next Decade and Beyond1. The PanFTS instrument is a hybrid based on spectrometers like the Tropospheric Emissions Spectrometer (TES) that measures thermal emission, and those like the Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO), and the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) that measure scattered solar radiation. Simultaneous measurements over the broad spectral range from IR to UV is accomplished by a two sided interferometer with separate optical trains and detectors for the UV-visible and IR spectral domains. This allows each side of the instrument to be independently optimized for its respective spectral domain. The overall interferometer design is compact because the two sides share a single high precision cryogenic optical path difference mechanism (OPDM) and metrology laser as well as a number of other instrument systems including the line-of-sight pointing mirror, the data management system, thermal control system, electrical system, and the mechanical structure. The PanFTS breadboard instrument has been tested in the laboratory and demonstrated the basic functionality for simultaneous measurements in the visible and IR. It is set to begin operations in the field at the California Laboratory for Atmospheric Remote Sensing (CLARS) observatory on Mt. Wilson measuring the atmospheric chemistry across the Los Angeles basin. Development has begun on a flight size PanFTS engineering model (EM) that addresses all critical scaling issues and demonstrates operation over the full spectral range of the flight instrument which will show the PanFTS instrument design is mature.


Fourier Transform Spectroscopy and Hyperspectral Imaging and Sounding of the Environment (2015), paper FW4A.3 | 2015

On-board Processing to Advance the PanFTS Imaging System for Earth Observation

J.-F. Blavier; Paula J. Pingree; Dmitriy Bekker; Rudi M. Bendig; Maxwell B. Bryk; Colin Donahue; Megan Fazio; Brian R. Franklin; Kenneth S. Manatt; Colin McKinney; Nooshin Meshkaty; Ryan M. Monroe; David M. Rider; Matthew V. Ryan; Stanley P. Sander; Thomas A. Werne

This paper describes the on-board processing approach for PanFTS, an imaging spectrometer designed to observe the Earth atmosphere from geosynchronous orbit.


Fourier Transform Spectroscopy and Hyperspectral Imaging and Sounding of the Environment (2015), paper FW4A.2 | 2015

Panchromatic Fourier Transform Spectrometer Engineering Model (PanFTS-EM) for Geostationary Atmospheric Measurements

Stanley P. Sander; Dmitriy Bekker; J.-F. Blavier; Maxwell B. Bryk; Colin Donahue; Renaud Goullioud; Bruce R. Hancock; Dean L. Johnson; Richard Key; Andrew U. Lamborn; Kenneth S. Manatt; James D. Moore; Jamie Nastal; Timothy Neville; Daniel J. Preston; David M. Rider; Matthew V. Ryan; James Wincentsen; Yen-Hung Wu

The Panchromatic Fourier Transform Spectrometer Engineering Model (PanFTS-EM) instrument is an imaging FTS to meet the requirements of the NASA GEO-CAPE Decadal Survey mission, as well as other missions for atmospheric composition and carbon cycle studies from geostationary orbit. PanFTS-EM is a flight-like engineering model which emulates the critical functions of the PanFTS flight instrument under realistic flight conditions.


Archive | 2011

MATMOS: the Mars atmospheric Trace Molecule Occultation Spectrometer

Paul O. Wennberg; V. J. Hipkin; James R. Drummond; U. Dalhousie; Geoffrey C. Toon; Mark Allen; J.-F. Blavier; Lynn Brown; Armin Kleinböhl; Jonathan P. D. Abbatt; Barbara Sherwood Lollar; Kimberly Strong; Kaley A. Walker; Peter F. Bernath; R. Todd Clancy; Edward A. Cloutis; David J. Desmarais; John M. Eiler; Yuk L. Yung; Therese Encrenaz; J. C. McConnell


Archive | 2008

Panchromatic Fourier Transform Spectrometer (PanFTS) for the Geostationary Coastal and Air Pollution Events (GEO-CAPE)Mission

Stanley P. Sander; Reinhard Beer; J.-F. Blavier; Kevin West Bowman; Annmarie Eldering; David M. Rider; Geoffrey C. Toon; Wesley A. Traub; John R. Worden


Archive | 2010

Balloon-borne observations of HO2 in the lower stratosphere: Comparison with photochemical model

R. A. Stachnik; Geoffrey C. Toon; J. J. Margitan; J.-F. Blavier; Herbert M. Pickett; San Wang


Archive | 2010

A new look at spatial gradients in Xco2 from satellite and ground-based observations

G. Keppel-Aleks; Paul O. Wennberg; T. A. Schneider; Debra Wunch; Geoffrey C. Toon; J.-F. Blavier; Coleen M. Roehl; Bronwen Connor; Vanessa Sherlock; Justus Notholt; Janina Messerschmidt; Charles E. Miller; Chris O'Dell


Archive | 2010

Improving Carbon Flux Estimates with Diurnal Profiling of Greenhouse Gases from Geostationary Orbit

Annmarie Eldering; Stanley P. Sander; J.-F. Blavier; David M. Rider; John R. Worden; Kevin West Bowman; Jessica Neu; Vijay Natraj


Archive | 2009

Column Averaged CO2, CH4, and CO Mixing Ratios at ARM-SGP

Martin A. Fischer; Debra Wunch; Sebastien Biraud; James B. Abshire; J.-F. Blavier; G. Keppel-Aleks; S. E. Sund Kulawik; Charles E. Miller; Coleen M. Roehl; Vivienne H. Payne; Colm Sweeney; Jay Robert Smith; Geoffrey C. Toon; Margaret S. Torn; Paul O. Wennberg

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David M. Rider

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Geoffrey C. Toon

California Institute of Technology

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Stanley P. Sander

California Institute of Technology

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Annmarie Eldering

California Institute of Technology

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Dmitriy Bekker

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Paul O. Wennberg

California Institute of Technology

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Richard Key

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Yen-Hung Wu

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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