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The Atmospheric Imaging Mission for Northern Regions: AIM-North

Authors :
Ray Nassar
Chris McLinden
Christopher E. Sioris
C. T. McElroy
Joseph Mendonca
Johanna Tamminen
Cameron G. MacDonald
Cristen Adams
Céline Boisvenue
Adam Bourassa
Ryan Cooney
Doug Degenstein
Guillaume Drolet
Louis Garand
Ralph Girard
Markey Johnson
Dylan B.A. Jones
Felicia Kolonjari
Bruce Kuwahara
Randall V. Martin
Charles E. Miller
Norman O’Neill
Aku Riihelä
Sébastien Roche
Stanley P. Sander
William R. Simpson
Gurpreet Singh
Kimberly Strong
Alexander P. Trishchenko
Helena van Mierlo
Zahra Vaziri Zanjani
Kaley A. Walker
Debra Wunch
Source :
Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing, Vol 45, Iss 3-4, Pp 423-442 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

Abstract

AIM-North is a proposed satellite mission that would provide observations of unprecedented frequency and density for monitoring northern greenhouse gases (GHGs), air quality (AQ) and vegetation. AIM-North would consist of two satellites in a highly elliptical orbit formation, observing over land from ∼40°N to 80°N multiple times per day. Each satellite would carry a near-infrared to shortwave infrared imaging spectrometer for CO2, CH4, and CO, and an ultraviolet-visible imaging spectrometer for air quality. Both instruments would measure solar-induced fluorescence from vegetation. A cloud imager would make near-real-time observations, which could inform the pointing of the other instruments to focus only on the clearest regions. Multiple geostationary (GEO) AQ and GHG satellites are planned for the 2020s, but they will lack coverage of northern regions like the Arctic. AIM-North would address this gap with quasi-geostationary observations of the North and overlap with GEO coverage to facilitate intercomparison and fusion of these datasets. The resulting data would improve our ability to forecast northern air quality and quantify fluxes of GHG and AQ species from forests, permafrost, biomass burning and anthropogenic activity, furthering our scientific understanding of these processes and supporting environmental policy.

Details

Language :
English, French
ISSN :
17127971 and 07038992
Volume :
45
Issue :
3-4
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Canadian Journal of Remote Sensing
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.bea1eaa11e724d9f81977ffae07d9fbc
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/07038992.2019.1643707