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NASA Striving To Improve Earth Science Mission Planning

With billions of dollars invested in an ever expanding fleet of EO Birds, it is critical that the data flowing from the various science and imaging payloads on board these satellites is effectively coordinated.
Moffett Field - Apr 07, 2003
NASA scientists are developing a new planning and scheduling system for Earth observation satellites (EOS), designed to acquire and integrate data from multiple complementary Earth-sensing instruments, enabling them to build complex models of the Earth's ecosystem.

Developed by a team of scientists at NASA Ames Research Center located in California's Silicon Valley and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., the new software is being designed to coordinate the observations made by entire fleets of satellites, which currently is done manually by each satellite's individual mission operation center.

"The scientific need for multiple sources of Earth science data in order to explain complex phenomena will require coordination in instrument scheduling and operations," explained Robert Morris, a computer scientist at NASA Ames who serves as the project's principal investigator.

Morris heads a seven-member team of experts in planning technology, systems integration and engineering, Earth science and mission operations.

"We propose to develop both a set of technology concepts and a prototype system based on these concepts that will address problems in coordinated scheduling, while acknowledging the realities of present-day mission design concepts," Morris added.

Entitled "Planning and Scheduling of Coordinated Science Observations," the project recently received funding from NASA's Office of Earth Science under the Advanced Information Systems Technology (AIST) Program. The project was one of 21 new investigations in information systems technology development that received over $20 million from the AIST Program. NASA Ames' project received nearly $900,000.

Through the AIST Program, NASA invests in research and development of new and innovative information technologies. The research supports and enhances NASA's Earth science enterprise and applications objectives as part of the agency's mission to understand and protect our home planet.

"The Committee on Earth Observation Satellites estimates that international space agencies are planning more than 80 Earth-observing missions over the next 15 years," Morris noted in the introduction to "An Integrated Architecture for Science Observation Scheduling for Fleets of Earth Observing Spacecraft," a research paper he co-authored with Jennifer Dungan, Jeremy Frank, Lina Khatib and David E. Smith.

"The missions will carry over 200 different instruments, providing measurements of many environmental change parameters."

Morris and his team of NASA scientists hope to improve communication between the various mission planners by using automated scheduling technology to coordinate satellite imaging and manage the increasing volume of scientific data produced during the missions.

Over the course of the two-year project, the science team will design algorithms that can be used to integrate new observation requests with an EOS constellation's existing operations plan. Upon completion of that phase, the team will integrate science observation scheduling technology developed at NASA Ames with the Automated Mission Planning and Scheduling (AMPS) system developed at NASA Goddard for use with EOS missions involving either single or multiple satellites.

Finally, the team will develop a technology plan for coordinated science planning for multiple missions and an enhanced automated tool for coordinated science planning of future EOS missions. The tool would be integrated with data collected by ground stations, to improve mission management and communication.

When the project is completed, Morris and the other members of the science team hope that the new planning and scheduling system will help Earth scientists develop better models of the Earth's ecosystem.

"The goal is that through this sort of automation and increased coordination, the ultimate outcome will be more useful scientific data," Morris said.

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Berkeley To Build Five Bird EO Constellation
San Francisco - Apr 02, 2003
NASA has awarded the University of California, Berkeley, a $173 million contract to build and operate a fleet of five satellites to pinpoint the event in Earth's magnetic neighborhood that triggers violent but colorful eruptions in the Northern and Southern lights.



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