York U space instrument successfully launched aboard microsatellite

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TORONTO, April 28, 2008 -- York University researchers will begin measuring pollution on Earth with instrumentation aboard a Canadian microsatellite, launched on an Indian spacecraft earlier today.

York University’s Argus microspectrometer is riding aboard the University of Toronto’s CanX-2 microsatellite, launched out of Sriharikota, India, at 9:23 am local time (11:53 pm EST) on the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) C-9.

“This is the first space instrument with the precision required to identify individual sources of pollution on a global scale,” says project leader Ben Quine, a professor in York’s Department of Earth & Space Sciences & Engineering.

The Argus device, which is small enough to fit in the palm of an adult’s hand, can identify sources of pollution up to a range of one kilometre by measuring carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere. Its satellite host is equally diminutive, at roughly the size of a carton of milk. This micro-technology paves the way for a new era of sustainable space instrumentation, says Quine.

”We’re moving away from clunky machines that cost millions upon millions of dollars to equipment that’s smaller, costs less, and is more efficient,” he says.

Quine believes Argus’ mandate is essential. “We need this kind of hard data to support Kyoto and other climate change initiatives,” he says.

Researchers will receive data from the experiment as early as next week.
 

Media contact:

 

Melissa Hughes, Media Relations, York University: 416 736 2100 x22097 / mehughes@yorku.ca

 

York University is the leading interdisciplinary research and teaching university in Canada. York offers a modern, academic experience at the undergraduate and graduate level in Toronto, Canada’s most international city. The third largest university in the country, York is host to a dynamic academic community of 50,000 students and 7,000 faculty and staff, as well as 200,000 alumni worldwide. York’s 11 faculties and 24 research centres conduct ambitious, groundbreaking research that is interdisciplinary, cutting across traditional academic boundaries. This distinctive and collaborative approach is preparing students for the future and bringing fresh insights and solutions to real-world challenges. York University is an autonomous, not-for-profit corporation.

 

 

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