鶹ֱapp

Professor Kim Strong and 鶹ֱapp physicist Kaley Walker, with ground-based instruments used in the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (photo by Diana Tyszko)

Climate tracking experiment celebrates 10 years

Scientists, industry and government representatives gathered at the University of Toronto recently for the 10-year anniversary of the successful Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment known as ACE.

Since ACE launched into the stratosphere on board a small Canadian satellite known as SCISAT a decade ago it has provided a steady stream of data that have played a huge role in understanding the depletion and recovery of the ozone layer.

“We’re thrilled to share the great success of SCISAT and remember that day when the satellite took its first measurements and reported back,” said 鶹ֱapp physicist Kaley Walker, deputy mission scientist of ACE. “This has been a great experiment to work on for 鶹ֱapp.”

SCISAT’s 650-kilometre-high orbit takes it over the polar regions of the Earth, as well as tropical and mid-latitude locations. It measures more than 30 different chemicals – more than any other satellite – that influence the distribution of stratospheric ozone, particularly in the Arctic.

ACE data have also validated environmental policy aimed at protecting the ozone layer. The Montreal Protocol, signed by United Nations leaders in 1987, prohibits the production and consumption of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), requires that refrigerants and fire extinguishers be recycled properly and bans the release of ozone-depleting refrigerants when servicing air conditioners or refrigeration equipment.

ACE data show that, since the ban, the concentrations of these ozone-depleting substances in the atmosphere are decreasing.

The two instruments aboard SCISAT – the Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) and the Measurements of Aerosol Extinction in the Stratosphere and Troposhere Retrieved by Occultation (MAESTRO) – have doubles that stay on Earth. Each spring, the ground-based instruments travel to Eureka, Nunavut to verify the data produced by the satellite.

SCISAT has also been able to collect data on other environmental dangers, including pollution from wildfires and forest fires and volcanoes.

“The ACE mission is still going strong,” said Walker. “We look forward to what else we can observe with it as our mission continues.”

Jessica Lewis is a writer with the Faculty of Arts & Science at the University of Toronto.

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief