Solar energy tracker powers down after 17 years

NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

The Sun is Earth's primary power source. Energy from the Sun, called solar irradiance, drives Earth's climate, temperature, weather, atmospheric chemistry, ocean cycles, energy balance and more. Credit: NASA / Scott Wiessinger
The Sun is Earth’s primary power source. Energy from the Sun, called solar irradiance, drives Earth’s climate, temperature, weather, atmospheric chemistry, ocean cycles, energy balance and more. Credit: NASA / Scott Wiessinger

After nearly two decades, the Sun has set for NASA’s SOlar Radiation and Climate Experiment (SORCE), a mission that continued and advanced the agency’s 40-year record of measuring solar irradiance and studying its influence on Earth’s climate.

The SORCE team turned off the spacecraft on February 25, 2020, concluding 17 years of measuring the amount, spectrum and fluctuations of solar energy entering Earth’s atmosphere — vital information for understanding climate and the planet’s energy balance. The mission’s legacy is continued by the Total and Spectral solar Irradiance Sensor (TSIS-1), launched to the International Space Station in December 2017, and TSIS-2, which will launch aboard its own spacecraft in 2023.

Monitoring Earth’s “Battery”

The Sun is Earth’s primary power source. Energy from the Sun, called solar irradiance, drives Earth’s climate, temperature, weather, atmospheric chemistry, ocean cycles, energy balance and more. Scientists need accurate measurements of solar power to model these processes, and the technological advances in SORCE’s instruments allowed more accurate solar irradiance measurements than previous missions.

“These measurements are important for two reasons,” said Dong Wu, project scientist for SORCE and TSIS-1 at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “Climate scientists need to know how much the Sun varies, so they know how much change in the Earth’s climate is due to solar variation. Secondly, we’ve debated for years, is the Sun getting brighter or dimmer over hundreds of years? We live only a short period, but an accurate trend will become very important. If you know how the Sun is varying and can extend that knowledge into the future, you can then put the anticipated future solar input into climate models together with other information, like trace gas concentrations, to estimate what our future climate will be.”

SORCE’s four instruments measured solar irradiance in two complementary ways: Total and spectral.

Total solar irradiance, or TSI, is the total amount of solar energy that reaches the Earth’s outer atmosphere in a given time. Sunspots (darkened areas on the Sun’s surface) and faculae (brightened areas) create tiny TSI variations that show up as measurable changes in Earth’s climate and systems. From space, SORCE and other solar irradiance missions measure TSI without interference from Earth’s atmosphere.

SORCE’s TSI values were slightly but significantly lower than those measured by previous missions. This was not an error — its Total Irradiance Monitor was ten times more accurate than previous instruments. This improved solar irradiance inputs into the Earth climate and weather models from what was previously available.

“The big surprise with TSI was that the amount of irradiance it measured was 4.6 watts per square meter less than what was expected,” said Tom Woods, SORCE’s principal investigator and senior research associate at the University of Colorado’s Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) in Boulder, Colorado. “That started a whole scientific discussion and the development of a new calibration laboratory for TSI instruments. It turned out that the TIM was correct, and all the past irradiance measurements were erroneously high.”

“It’s not often in climate studies that you make a quantum leap in measurement capability, but the tenfold improvement in accuracy by the SORCE / TIM was exactly that,” said Greg Kopp, TIM instrument scientist for SORCE and TSIS at LASP.

SORCE’s other measurements focused on spectrally-resolved solar irradiance (SSI): The variation of solar irradiance with wavelength across the solar spectrum, covering the major wavelength regions important to Earth’s climate and atmospheric composition.

Besides the familiar rainbow of colors in visible light, solar energy also contains shorter ultraviolet and longer infrared wavelengths, both of which play important roles in affecting Earth’s atmosphere. Earth’s atmospheric layers and surface absorb different wavelengths of energy — for example, atmospheric ozone absorbs harmful ultraviolet radiation, while atmospheric water vapor and carbon dioxide absorb longer-wavelength infrared radiation, which keeps the surface warm. SORCE was the first satellite mission to record a broad spectrum of SSI for a long period, tracking wavelengths from 1 to 2400 nanometers across its three SSI instruments.

“For public health, ozone chemistry and ultraviolet radiation are very important, and visible light is important for climate modeling,” Wu said. “We need to know the solar variability at different wavelengths and compare these measurements with our models.”

SORCE observed the Sun across two solar minima (periods of low sunspot activity), providing valuable information about variability over a relatively short 11-year period. But a longer record is needed to improve long-term predictions, Wu said.

Buying Time for an Aging Mission

SORCE was originally designed to collect data for just five years. Extending its lifespan to 17 required creative and resourceful engineering, said Eric Moyer, SORCE’s mission director at Goddard.

SORCE’s battery began to degrade in its eighth year of operations, no longer providing enough power to support consistent data collection. Unfortunately, the NASA instrument designed to take up its TSI measurements, Glory, was lost shortly after its 2011 launch, and the next instrument, the NOAA / U.S. Air Force Total solar irradiance Calibration Transfer Experiment (TCTE), would not launch until 2013. If SORCE could no longer operate, the ongoing solar irradiance record could be interrupted. Because the Sun changes very slowly — its sunspots and faculae follow an 11-year cycle, and some changes span decades or even centuries — a long, continuous record is essential for understanding how the Sun behaves.

The engineering team switched to daytime-only solar data collection, powering down the instruments and part of the spacecraft during the night part of the SORCE orbit. This plan effectively allowed the satellite to run with no functioning battery, Woods said — a groundbreaking engineering achievement.

“The operation and science teams at our partner organizations developed and implemented a completely new way to operate this mission when it appeared it was over because of battery capacity loss,” said Moyer. LASP and Northrup Grumman Space Systems led the development of new operational software in order to continue the SORCE mission. “The small, highly dedicated team persevered and excelled when encountering operational challenges. I am very proud of their excellent accomplishment and honored to have had the opportunity to participate in managing the SORCE mission.”

Continuing a Bright Legacy

As SORCE’s time in the Sun ends, NASA’s solar irradiance record continues with TSIS-1. The mission’s two instruments measure TSI and SSI with even more advanced instruments that build on SORCE’s legacy, said Wu. They have already enabled advances like establishing a new reference for the “quiet” Sun when there were no sunspots in 2019, and for comparing this to SORCE observations of the previous solar cycle minimum in 2008.

TSIS-2 is scheduled to launch in 2023 with identical instruments to TSIS-1. Its vantage point aboard its own spacecraft will give it more flexibility than TSIS-1’s data collection aboard the ISS.

“We are looking forward to continuing the groundbreaking science ushered in by SORCE, and to maintaining the solar irradiance data record through this decade and beyond with TSIS-1 and 2,” said LASP’s Peter Pilewskie, principal investigator for the TSIS missions. “SORCE set the standard for measurement accuracy and spectral coverage, two attributes of the mission that were key to gaining insight into the Sun’s role in the climate system. TSIS has made additional improvements that should further enhance Sun-climate studies.”

“Solar irradiance measurements are very challenging, and the SORCE team proposed a different way, a new technology, to measure them,” said Wu. “Using advanced technology to advance our science capability, SORCE is a very good example of NASA’s spirit.”

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For more information on SORCE, visit: http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/sorce/.

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Carl Friis-Hansen
March 21, 2020 2:34 am

This plan effectively allowed the satellite to run with no functioning battery…

So I guess the software and receiver/transmitter would boot as voltage comes up in the morning hours.
Would there have been an advantage if the mission could have continued until 2023, for the sake of continuity?

D. J. Hawkins
Reply to  Carl Friis-Hansen
March 21, 2020 6:12 am

TSIS-1 is already operational and TSIS-2 will be a twin, so it seems that they already have an overlapping calibration period.

OweninGA
Reply to  D. J. Hawkins
March 21, 2020 8:39 am

I hope the people doing the calibration have absolutely nothing to do with the NASA climate science hucksters! Fudging numbers at station changes is a specialty of that bunch.

charles nelson
March 21, 2020 2:40 am

They could have saved a lot of time, money and effort if they’d only spoken to Lief first.
He’s absolutely certain that the sun has no influence on the earth’s climate. So there.

Reply to  charles nelson
March 21, 2020 3:54 pm

the sun has no influence on the earth’s climate
To show that it is necessary to have a good record of TSI.
And, actually, there is a small influence of TSI of the order of 0.1 degree.

JimG1
Reply to  Leif Svalgaard
March 21, 2020 6:24 pm

Considering the fact that 70% of the earth’s surface is covered to an average depth of 3.5km with water, which stores and releases energy in ways we don’t completely understand, particularly on a longer term basis, I doubt that one should have such a lofty certainty regarding its effect upon climate.

Reply to  JimG1
March 21, 2020 7:55 pm

I doubt that one should have such a lofty certainty regarding its effect upon climate
Nor such a lofty certainty that it has an effect without the data to show it.
This is why we need to continue to measure TSI in order to monitor its effect long-term. At present we do not have data showing an effect larger than 0.1 degrees.
Here is my view on the matter:
https://leif.org/research/Climate-Change-My-View.pdf

Robert of Texas
Reply to  Leif Svalgaard
March 22, 2020 12:17 pm

Is that before or after all the “positive forcing”s are added in?

Walter Sobchak
March 21, 2020 7:03 am

“Energy from the Sun, called solar irradiance, drives Earth’s climate, temperature, weather, atmospheric chemistry, ocean cycles, energy balance and more”

That is a lie, denier.

97% of Scientists know thatnCO2 drives the climate. Everything else is totally irrelevant.

Paul Stevens
March 21, 2020 7:23 am

Every time we turn around something like this pops up: “That started a whole scientific discussion and the development of a new calibration laboratory for TSI instruments. It turned out that the TIM was correct, and all the past irradiance measurements were erroneously high.”

I thought the science was settled!

Gary
March 21, 2020 8:13 am

If the total incoming solar irradiance was overestimated, would that not imply that the heat retained by the earth’s climate system was also overestimated?

Rick
March 21, 2020 9:13 am

Well, the science is settled…

Fergie
March 21, 2020 6:08 pm

I thought there was some work done with the influence of Cosmic Rays and the variability of the Sun’s magnetic field that affected cloud formation and therefore the degree of energy absorption from the sun as the article some years ago indicated. I also thought this concept was confirmed by an experiment with the Large Hadron Collider in Europe. Don’t we have a satellite measuring this field?

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/05/17/new-study-links-cosmic-rays-to-aerosolscloud-formation-via-solar-magnetic-activity-modulation/

Anybody know where the science is on this theory?

Jim G
March 21, 2020 7:58 pm

“In all, CU-Boulder has received about $120 million from NASA for the construction and operation of SORCE. But in 2008, LASP took the unusual step of returning $3 million in cost savings from the SORCE mission to NASA that resulted from the program’s efficient operations.”

One would think that if a long running record was import, you would design the satellite to last longer than 5 years.

CU-Boulder’s sun-gazing SORCE satellite, designed to last 5 years, turns 10
Published: Jan. 22, 2013
https://www.colorado.edu/today/2013/01/22/cu-boulders-sun-gazing-sorce-satellite-designed-last-5-years-turns-10

ian
March 22, 2020 11:39 am

‘Science’ is run like a religious cult. Dogma that has been put forward by the ‘establishment’ elites may not be questioned, even if it is demonstrably false. All experimental data must first be perused to ensure that it meets the dogma which it is supposed to be measuring. If the old dogma is proven false, then the old dogma must be protected and those bringing forth the ‘truth’ must be attacked while in the background the ‘elites’ are preparing another set of ‘new dogma’ that supports their underlying theories of how the universe operates. Once the ‘new dogma’ is ready, it is released as a triumphant realization by the ‘establishment’ that they have discovered improvements in their theories that may only come from them.

This is how ‘science’ really works in the real world. Most people just can’t handle the truth anyways.
ian

Ted
March 24, 2020 5:57 am

SORCE has shown the SSI needs to be studied and recorded, and that focusing on TSI has limited value. Just as CO2 only blocks certain wavelengths, the atmosphere only allows certain wavelengths of solar energy to reach the lower atmosphere and surface. When it was proposed that CO2 must be driving temperatures because there was no other obvious forcing, it was assumed that irradiance along different parts of the spectrum moved pretty much in lockstep with TSI. SORCE data has shown that solar output along different wavelengths varies at least ten times as much as expected, and sometimes in the opposite direction. The limited sample size of the SORCE data means that variations in solar output could easily be much greater, and that there is no evidence that solar variation does not account for all observed warming.

JimG1
Reply to  Ted
March 24, 2020 8:21 am

Ted,

There are only two sources of energy on this planet, solar and geothermal. Storage and release of these must ultimately account for climate variations. With the oceans being the huge mediating variable being what it is on this water world, it stands to reason that its effect, which we do not yet understand, plays a significant role in the longer term variation.