Scientists at the University of Sheffield are one step closer to launching a satellite mission to measure the biomass in the Earth's forests.
BIOMASS is one of three satellites currently competing to be selected as the next European Space Agency's (ESA) Earth Explorer series.
Each year human activities, such as burning fossil fuels, release around 8 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide into
the atmosphere. Tropical deforestation is thought to contribute around 20% of these emissions, but with huge uncertainties, and the true value may be as high as 30%.
A major factor in this uncertainty is that the biomass in the forests that are being cleared is very poorly known. As a result, the BIOMASS satellite has been designed to measure forest biomass and height, forest disturbance and regrowth for all the world's forests at spatial scales of around 50-100 m. This will greatly improve our understanding of current forest resources and also, crucially, will tell us how they are changing.
Professor Shaun Quegan, from the School of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Sheffield, is the lead scientist on this mission and is working with scientists from around the world to ensure that BIOMASS is successful.
A big step towards getting BIOMASS into space occurred in February 2009, after a selection meeting in Lisbon at which six competing missions were presented. Only three survived, one of which was BIOMASS.
The next two years will now be spent in critical assessment of the mission, with the aim of getting BIOMASS through the final selection in 2011.
BIOMASS will be able to give the first chance to see the Earth with the special view provided by this type of radar, and it is expected that it will be able to do much more than measure biomass. For example, the radar will be able to penetrate deep into dry soils and ice, making it able to map the bedrock in places like the Sahara, which is important for mineral exploration and understanding past climates, and to measure ice motion across the globe.
Buy the Sheffield Telegraph and the Property Guide every Friday. To subcribe CLICK HERE
MORE:
Local News
Local Sport
Arts Guide
Community News
Listings Guide
Restaurant Guide
Letters