Earth Observing System
Current plans call for three major satellite platforms, two in polar and one in a low inclination orbit. One polar orbiter (EOS-AM) will have a midmorning descending node crossing time, while the other (EOS-PM) will have an equator crossing time in the afternoon. The third (EOS- CHEM) will be in a low inclination orbit. Each EOS satellite is designed to make maximum use of simultaneous, complementary views of the earth from a wide variety of instruments. EOS-AM will be the first satellite launched in this series, followed by EOS-PM, and the EOS Chemistry Mission (EOS-CHEM). The AM mission will be based on a suite of instruments including an advanced spaceborne thermal emission and reflection radiometer, a cloud and earth radiant energy system, a multiangle imaging spectroradiometer, a moderate resolution spectroradiometer, and a sensor to measure pollution in the troposphere. Instruments carried on the PM platform will include the advanced microwave scanning radiometer-EOS, the moderate resolution spectroradiometer, an advanced microwave sounding unit, an atmospheric infrared sounder, a humidity sounder for Brazil, and the cloud and earth radiant energy system. The EOS-CHEM will monitor atmospheric ozone, aerosols, and pollution using the high-resolution dynamics limb sounder, the microwave limb sounder, an ozone monitoring instrument, and the tropospheric emission spectrometer.