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    ESA > Our Activities > Observing the Earth > The Living Planet Programme

    SMOS launch nearing: Media Day at ESA/ESRIN

    SMOS in orbit
    9 October 2009

    ESA PR 25-2009. On Wednesday 21 October, media representatives will have the opportunity to attend an in-depth briefing at ESA’s ESRIN establishment in Frascati near Rome on the upcoming mission of SMOS, ESA’s Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity satellite scheduled for a Rockot launch from Plesetsk, Russia on 2 November at 02:50 CET.

    ESA’s Director of Earth Observation Programmes Volker Liebig, together with other European experts from participating space agencies and industry, will present the SMOS mission and its scientific objectives and will be available for interviews.

    Following the successful launch of GOCE on 17 March, SMOS will be the European Space Agency’s second Earth Explorer satellite under its Living Planet Programme to go into orbit. After the successful launch in 2002 of Envisat, the largest Earth observation satellite ever built, ESA started developing the Earth Explorer series of missions to provide a moderate-cost, fast response to important scientific challenges using cutting-edge technologies.

    SMOS will primarily observe soil moisture over the Earth's landmasses and salinity over the oceans. Soil-moisture data are urgently required for hydrological studies; ocean-salinity data are vital for improving our understanding of ocean circulation patterns. Data from SMOS will lead to a better understanding of the Earth's water cycle and to better weather and extreme-event forecasting and will contribute to seasonal-climate forecasting. As a secondary objective, SMOS will also provide observations over snow and ice regions, contributing to study of the cryosphere.

    SMOS measurement principle

    One innovative feature of this mission is that it will demonstrate a new measuring technique adopting a completely different approach to observing the Earth from space. The truly novel MIRAS payload instrument which has been developed is capable of observing both soil moisture and ocean salinity by capturing images of microwave radiation emitted from the Earth’s surface around a frequency of 1.4 GHz (L-band). SMOS will carry the first ever polar-orbiting, space-borne, 2D interferometric radiometer.


    The programme for the SMOS Media Day on 21 October at ESA/ESRIN will run as follows:

    09:00 – 11:00 Transfer from Rome airports (Fiumicino, Ciampino) to ESA/ESRIN

    10:00 – 11:00 Registration

    11:00 ESA’s Earth Observation Programmes (including update on GOCE and ESA’s Climate Change Initiative) Volker Liebig, Director of Earth Observation Programmes, ESA

    11:15 The SMOS mission Susanne Mecklenburg, SMOS Mission Manager, ESA

    11:25 The French role in SMOS François Bermudo, SMOS Project Manager, CNES

    11:35 The Spanish role in SMOS Jorge Lomba, Head of the ESA Programmes Department, CDTI

    11:45 The scientific objectives of SMOS Matthias Drusch, SMOS Mission Scientist, ESA

    11:55 Latest update on SMOS launch preparations in Plesetsk Achim Hahne, SMOS Project Manager, ESA

    12:15 Question & Answer session

    12:45 – 14:00 Individual interview opportunities

    12:45 – 14:00 Buffet lunch

    14:00 End of event Transfer to Rome airports

    Media representatives wishing to attend this event are kindly requested to fill in the registration form linked on the right and email or fax it back by Monday 19 October to:

    Dieter Isakeit
    Head of the ESA-ESRIN Corporate Communication Office
    Via Galileo Galilei
    00044 Frascati, Rome
    Email: dieter.isakeit@esa.int
    Fax +39 06 941 80 952
    Tel: +39 06 941 80 950

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