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The international science community is invited to participate in the 1st ESA-JAXA EarthCARE In Orbit Validation Workshop, organised by the European Space Agency (ESA), in cooperation with its partner, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA).
The Earth Cloud, Aerosol and Radiation Explorer (EarthCARE) mission objective is to improve our understanding of the cloud-aerosol-radiation interactions and Earth radiative budget, so that they can be modelled with better reliability in climate and numerical weather prediction models. To achieve this objective, EarthCARE will measure the 3D structure of clouds, precipitation and aerosols, together with collocated observations of solar (shortwave) and terrestrial (thermal) radiation.
Specifically, the EarthCARE scientific objectives are:
To fulfil its objectives, the EarthCARE mission is collecting co-registered observations from a suite of four instruments located on a common platform. The optical payload encompasses three European instruments, consisting of an ATmospheric LIDar (ATLID), a Multi- Spectral Imager (MSI) and a BroadBand Radiometer (BBR). The fourth instrument, provided by JAXA, is a Cloud Profiling Radar (CPR).
- The two active instruments, ATLID and CPR, will provide vertical profiles of cloud and atmosphere along the satellite nadir path.
- MSI provides contextual information that allows profile extension in 3D, as well as some aerosol information.
- BBR provides the measured radiation balance from the shortwave and thermal fluxes, for comparison.
Instrument data is processed individually and synergistically to retrieve the vertical structure and horizontal distribution of clouds, precipitation and aerosol fields, together with the outgoing radiation, over all climate zones.
This ESA mission is being implemented in cooperation with JAXA, and has been launched on 28 May 2024.