Publication Date:
2013-08-31
Description:
The objective of the Active Cavity Radiometer (ACR) experiment on the Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science (ATLAS) mission is the measurement of the total solar irradiance with state-of-the-art accuracy and precision. This experiment is part of an ongoing program of space flight observations to study short- and long-term variations in the total solar output of optical energy. Precise observations of solar total irradiance provide information on the solar cycle and other long-term trends in solar output that are of climatological significance as well as short-term solar physics phenomena such as radiation anisotropy, active region structure, missing flux due to sunsports, bolometry of solar flares, global oscillations, coronal holes, and large-scale convective flows. The principal role of the ATLAS ACR observations will be in support of extended solar irradiance experiments on free-flying satellites. Annual in-flight comparison of observations by both ATLAS and free-flying experiments is an important part of sustaining the long-term precision of the climatological solar irradiance data base at the required + or - 0.1 percent level. Another role for ATLAS solar irradiance measurements will be establishment of the radiation scale at the solar total flux level in the International System of Units (SI). Two types of pyrheliometers, the ACR and SOLCON, will be directly intercompared during the ATLAS 1 mission. Addition of other sensors is planned for future reflights. Comparisons of solar observations by different pyrheliometers in the shuttle space environment will provide the most definitive experiment for determining their accuracy in defining the radiation scale at the solar total flux level.
Keywords:
ASTRONAUTICS (GENERAL)
Type:
NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center, Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science, Mission 1; 3 p
Format:
application/pdf
Permalink