INESC Porto developed a technology, together with ESA – European Space
Agency, that enables a more effective measurement of gases in the
atmosphere comparatively to the currently used techniques. With this
technology, it will be possible to measure gases, such as carbon dioxide,
methane, nitrous oxide and ozone – the gases responsible for global
warming and greenhouse effects.
The system developed by INESC Porto's Optoelectronics and Electronic
System Unit (UOSE) has a high potential of applicability in satellites due
to its efficiency, compactness and reduced volume and mass. The satellites
equipped with INESC Porto's optical fibre filters will be able to detect
pollutant gases in the Earth's atmosphere in concentrations less than 1 km
high, at an altitude of 400 km.
The partnership between INESC Porto and ESA started in 2006 and is now
showing its first signs of success with the development of an optical
fibre filter that is capable of measuring carbon dioxide levels from
space.
Other than carbon dioxide, this technology is capable of providing a
precise measurement of other pollutant gases, such as methane gas, nitrous
oxide and ozone, besides measuring levels of humidity, atmospheric
pressure, temperature and wind speed. Thus, this is an essential tool made
in Portugal for research on climate change, a step forward to the control
of greenhouse gases in the battle against global warming.
If it is applied to satellites, the filter developed by INESC Porto is
capable of monitoring all kinds of pollutant gas concentrations less than
1 km high, 50 km wide, at an altitude of 400 km. Unlike what the currently
used technologies - atmospheric balloons and airplanes equipped for that
purpose -provide, with the filters created by INESC Porto, it will be
possible to map the atmosphere three-dimensionally, with a higher
resolution and from a single position.
The technology's potential of application in orbital systems and
scientific missions has to do with its unique features: efficiency,
compactness and reduced volume and mass. The technology developed by INESC
Porto consists of an ultra-narrow spectral tuneable and heat-reflecting
filter based on optical fibre technology that can be used in order to
monitor the atmosphere with the reflection of laser impulses. Using the
radiation's time of flight and absorption, it will be possible to extract
profiles of pollutant gas concentrations in the atmosphere.
SOURCE: INESC Porto