The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) mission

Crisp, D., R.M. Atlas, F.-M. Breon, L.R. Brown, J.P. Burrows, P. Ciais, B.J. Connor, S.C. Doney, I. Fung, D.J. Jacob, C.E. Miller, D. O’Brien, S. Pawson, J. Randerson, P. Rayner, R.J. Salawitch, S.P. Sander, B. Sen, G.L. Stephens, P.P. Tans, G. Toon, P. Wennberg, S. Wofsy, Y. Yung, Z. Kuang, B. Chudasama, G. Sprague, B. Weiss, R. Pollock, D. Kenyon, and S. Schroll (2004), The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) mission, Advances in Space Research, 34, 700-709, doi:10.1016/j.asr.2003.08.062.
Abstract

The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) mission will make the first global, space-based measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2 ) with the precision, resolution, and coverage needed to characterize CO2 sources and sinks on regional scales. The measurement approach and instrument specifications were determined through an analysis of existing carbon cycle data and a series of observing system simulation experiments. During its 2-year mission, OCO will fly in a 1:15 PM sun-synchronous orbit with a 16-day ground-track repeat time, just ahead of the EOS Aqua platform. It will carry a single instrument that incorporates three bore-sighted high-resolution spectrometers designed to measure reflected sunlight in the 0.76-lm O2 A-band and in the CO2 bands at 1.61 and 2.06 lm. Soundings recorded in these three bands will be used to retrieve the column-averaged CO2 dry air mole fraction (XCO2 ). A comprehensive validation program was included in the mission to ensure that the space-based XCO2 measurements have precisions of ~0.3% (1 ppm) on regional scales. OCO measurements will be used in global synthesis inversion and data assimilation models to quantify CO2 sources and sinks. While OCO will have a nominal lifetime of only 2 years, it will serve as a pathfinder for future long-term CO2 monitoring missions.

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