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Scientific objectives of the Solar Mesosphere Explorer mission

Authors :
Thomas, G. E
Barth, C. A
Hansen, E. R
Hord, C. W
Lawrence, G. M
Mount, G. H
Rottman, G. J
Rusch, D. W
Stewart, A. I
Thomas, R. J
Source :
Pure and Applied Geophysics. 118(1-2)
Publication Year :
1980
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1980.

Abstract

The paper describes the NASA Solar Mesosphere Explorer mission which will study mesospheric ozone and the processes which form and destroy it, measure the ozone density and its altitude distribution from 30 to 80 km, monitor incoming solar UV radiation, and provide a rigorous test of the photochemical equilibrium theory of the mesospheric oxygen-hydrogen system. Five instruments will be carried on the polar-orbiting spacecraft: UV ozone, IR airglow, and visible NO2 programmable Ebert-Fastie spectrometers, a four-channel IR radiometer, and a solar UV spectrometer. Atmospheric measurements will be made of the mesospheric and stratospheric ozone density distribution, water vapor density distribution, temperature profile, ozone photolysis rate, and NO2 density distribution. In addition, the solar UV monitor will measure both the 0.2-0.31 micron spectral region and the Lyman-alpha (0.1216 micron) contribution to the solar irradiance.

Subjects

Subjects :
Solar Physics

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
118
Issue :
1-2
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Notes :
JPL-955357
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19800050286
Document Type :
Report