
ESA Biomass: New satellite able to 'look through' forests and icebergs
What will the Biomass Satellite do?
The huge umbrella-shaped satellite will open out to around 12 metres in diameter. It will orbit Earth and its powerful radar will be able to look down on large areas of forests, and amazingly look beyond the tops of the trees and into the forest below, even picking out tree trunks, branches and the forest floor. The aim is for the satellite to "weigh" the Earth's forests, revealing how much planet-warming carbon is being stored within trees and therefore kept out of the atmosphere.This has never been achieved before so the ESA are at the forefront of climate science, helping to more accurately study climate change and track rates of deforestation.If everything goes well, the team hopes to produce the first maps within six months, and will then continue to gather data for the next five years.
Bjorn Rommen said the team will mostly be looking at tropical rainforests because they are "the biggest unknown and that is where there is a lot of change happening," but they have interests elsewhere too. "Biomass will also be looking at land ice in the Antarctic and how it is moving. It will be able to look deeper into the ice than other satellites due to it running at a higher frequency and its ability to go further that others before it", he added. They will also look at deserts, with a focus on looking at where rivers would have previously flowed but have since dried up to give clues about ancient civilisations that lived there before they were deserts.

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Scottish Sun
2 days ago
- Scottish Sun
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Reuters
2 days ago
- Reuters
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Scottish Sun
4 days ago
- Scottish Sun
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