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Friday, April 9, 2010

Europe launches satellite to track climate change

The Jakarta Post, Associated Press, Darmstadt, Germany | Thu, 04/08/2010 9:42 PM

CryoSat 2 satellite

The European Space Agency says it successfully launched a new satellite designed to measure the effects of climate change on Earth's polar ice caps.

ESA said at its European Space Operations in Germany Thursday it received a signal from CryoSat 2 after it took off on a Russian rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, meaning lift-off was successful.

CryoSat 2 is designed to pinpoint the effects of climate change on Earth's polar ice sheets. Using radar technology, it is to measure tiny variations in the thickness of ice floating in the polar oceans and on land.

In 2005, ESA lost its first CryoSat when the launcher rocket failed, causing a five-year delay of the mission, which has been eagerly awaited by glacial scientists since the 1990s.

Related Article:

Esa's Cryosat mission switches on radar instrument


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