Aqua carries six instruments for studies of water on the Earth's
surface and in the
atmosphere, of which four are still operating: • Advanced
Microwave Scanning Radiometer-EOS (AMSR-E) — measures
cloud properties,
sea surface temperature, near-surface
wind speed,
radiative energy flux, surface water,
ice and
snow. Furnished by the
National Space Development Agency of Japan. The AMSR-E instrument had over 480 pounds of spinning mass, and the lubricant in the bearing assembly gradually deteriorated over the course of the mission. By 2007, there was a noticeable increase in motor current. This led to the development of new contingency procedures in case of high current or torque, which were put in place in 2011. In October 2011, the instrument began to cause yaw vibrations in the spacecraft that exceeded torque limits and on October 4, 2011, was automatically slowed to 4 rpm from the normal 40 rpm and then, because it could not maintain 4 rpm, was slowed to a stop. A recovery procedure was developed and tested through 2012, culminating with a December 4, 2012 successful acceleration to 2.0767 rpm to allow for cross-calibration with the AMSR-2 instrument launched in 2012 aboard the
GCOM-W1 satellite. On December 4, 2015, AMSR-E was slowed to a stop and then on March 3, 2016, it was turned off. •
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) — also measures cloud properties and radiative energy flux, also
aerosol properties; land cover and
land use change, fires and
volcanoes. An identical MODIS instrument is also aboard
Terra. As of 2017, some degradation of channels in the MODIS short wave visible bands has been observed by the Ocean Biology Processing Group (OBPG). •
Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU-A) — measures atmospheric
temperature and
humidity. Since launch, AMSU has lost 5 of 15 channels. Power to the AMSU-A2 microwave instrument was lost at 19:47 UT September 24, 2016. This caused the loss of Channels 1 and 2. All recovery attempts were unsuccessful and no further recovery attempts are planned. On September 25, 2016, Cooler-A experienced a shut down anomaly. Anomaly recovery occurred two days later and also cleared a condition that had disabled Cooler-A telemetry since the 2014 Cooler-A anomaly. •
Humidity Sounder for Brazil (HSB) —
VHF band equipment measuring atmospheric humidity. Furnished by
Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais of Brazil. The HSB instrument has been in survival mode, and thus non-operational, since February 5, 2003, when the scan mirror motor failed. •
Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) — Flying Modules 3 and 4, measure broadband radiative energy flux. CERES' shortwave channel on module 4 failed on March 30, 2005, but its two other channels remain operational. The Aqua spacecraft has a mass of about , plus propellant of about at launch. Stowed for launch, the satellite fit in a volume of 2.68 m x 2.49 m x 6.49 m. Deployed, Aqua is 4.81 m x 16.70 m x 8.04 m. File:Aqua instruments.jpg|Aqua instruments File:Aqua satellite simulation.jpg|Aqua satellite File:2007 Arctic Sea Ice.jpg|Image of
Arctic shrinkage from Aqua observations ==See also==