A21I-01
DSCOVR/EPIC Images and Science: A New Way to View the Entire Sunlit Earth From A Sun-Earth Lagrange-1 Orbit

Tuesday, 15 December 2015: 08:00
3010 (Moscone West)
Jay R Herman1, Alexander Marshak2, Adam Szabo2 and DSCOVR Mission Science and Project Team, (1)University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD, United States, (2)NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, United States
Abstract:
The DSCOVR mission was launched into a Sun-Earth Lagrange-1 orbit 1.5 million kilometers from earth in February 2015 onboard a SpaceX Falcon-9 rocket. The solar wind and earth science instruments were tested during the 4.5 month journey to L-1. The first data were obtained during the June-July commissioning phase, which included the first moderate resolution (10 km) color images of the entire sunlit earth, color images of the Moon, and scientific data from 10 narrow band filters (317.5, 325, 340, 388, 443, 551, 680, 687.75, 764, and 779.5 nm). Three of these filters were used to construct the color images (443, 551, 680 nm) based on the average eye response histogram of the sunlit earth. This talk will discuss some of the issues involved in deriving science quality data for global ozone, the aerosol index (dust, smoke, and volcanic ash), cloud amounts and reflectivity, and cloud height (measured from the O2 A- and B-bands). As with most new satellites, the science data are preliminary.