GOES-17
GOES-17 is the second of the current generation of weather satellites operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The four satellites of the series will extend the availability of the GOES until 2036 for weather forecast and meteorology research. The satellite was built by Lockheed Martin, was based on the A2100A platform, and will have an expected useful life of 15 years. GOES-17 is intended to deliver high-resolution visible and infrared imagery and lightning observations of more than half the globe.
The satellite was launched on 1 March 2018 and reached geostationary orbit on 12 March 2018. In May 2018, during the satellite's testing phase after launch, a problem was discovered with its primary instrument, the Advanced Baseline Imager. GOES-17 became operational as GOES-West on 12 February 2019.
Operations
The satellite was launched into space on 1 March 2018 by an Atlas V vehicle from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida. It had a launch mass of. On 12 March, GOES-17 joined GOES-16 in geosynchronous orbit at above Earth.On 24 October 2018, GOES-17 began a 20-day, 2.5°/day westward drift maneuver from its checkout position of 89.5° west longitude to its operational position of 137.2° west. During the drift maneuver, all instruments except for the magnetometer were disabled. Meanwhile, GOES-15 began an eastward drift maneuver on 29 October 2018 to 128° west, with all of its sensors still functioning. It reached its new location on 7 November 2018. GOES-17 began transmitting its first images on 13 November 2018. The first high-definition images transmitted where of Alaska, Hawaii, and the Pacific Ocean. GOES-15's drift was intended to provide additional separation from GOES-17 to prevent communication interference. GOES-17 reached its assigned longitude 13 November 2018 and began additional testing. GOES-17 was declared operational on 12 February 2019. Both GOES-17 and GOES-15 operated in tandem through early 2020 to allow assessment of GOES-17's performance as GOES-West. On March 2, 2020, GOES-15 was deactivated and moved to a storage orbit, with plans to re-activate it in August 2020 supplement GOES-17 operations due the [|known flaws] with the Advanced Baseline Imager.
Malfunctions
On 23 May 2018 NOAA announced that there were problems with the cooling system of the Advanced Baseline Imager. Due to the cooling failure, infrared and near-infrared imaging was only possible 12 hours per day. The issue affects 13 of the infrared and near-infrared channels on the instrument. No other sensors of the satellite are affected.During a media conference call on 24 July 2018, the problem component was identified as the loop heat pipe, which transports heat from the cryocooler and ABI to radiators. The degraded performance of this component means the ABI gets hotter than intended, which lowers the sensitivity of the infrared sensors. In order to work properly, the sensors need to be cooled to varying degrees depending on what wavelength they observe; the sensors operating in the longest wavelengths need to be kept as low as in order to reduce thermal noise.
The GOES-R System Program Director, Pam Sullivan, said on the conference call that preliminary projections suggested that via thermal mitigation measures such as changing the spacecraft alignment, ABI performance could be significantly improved, depending on the season. The orbit of the spacecraft brings the ABI into full sunlight more often around the equinoxes, resulting in more solar radiation being absorbed by the ABI and degrading the performance of the infrared channels, with projections indicating that 10 of the 16 channels will be available 24 hours a day, with the other six channels available for "most of the day, to varying degrees, depending on their wavelength." Around the solstices, the orbit alignment is such that the ABI receives less direct sunlight, and it is projected that 13 of the 16 channels will be available 24 hours a day with the other three channels available 20 or more hours per day.
The loop heat pipe was manufactured by Orbital ATK. On 2 October 2018, NOAA and NASA appointed a five-member Mishap Investigation Board to further examine the issue. NOAA worked with Northrop Grumman to identify exactly what caused the loop heat pipe to fail, using engineering-grade copies of the spacecraft components for testing. Possible causes mentioned in the conference call included debris or foreign objects inside the heat pipe, or an improper amount of propylene coolant. The final conclusion of the independent failure review team's investigation, released on 3 October 2018, was that "the most likely cause of the thermal performance issue is foreign object debris blocking the flow of the coolant in the loop heat pipes. A series of ground-based tests introducing FOD into test pipes support FOD as the most likely cause. A second potential cause, mechanical failure, was investigated and deemed unlikely. The failure review team recommended changes to the ABI radiators on the subsequent GOES-R series satellites, including a simpler hardware configuration and the use of ammonia as the coolant rather than propylene. Redesign efforts are underway, and a Critical Design Review was originally scheduled for December 2018, but was delayed as a result of a government shutdown. It was eventually held on 7–8 February 2019.
Various software workarounds have been introduced in order to minimize the impact of the LHP problem.
In October 2018, Lockheed Martin finished assembling the next unit of the GOES-R series, GOES-T, and was preparing to begin environmental testing of the completed satellite, when NOAA ordered the removal of the ABI to return to the manufacturer, Harris Corporation, for remanufacturing. As a result, the scheduled May 2020 launch of GOES-T has been delayed. As of May 2019, its launch date is set for December 2021. The 2024 launch of GOES-U will probably not be delayed as a result of the redesign.
On 20 November 2018, a memory error occurred in the ABI which resulted from a software update for its cryocooler subsystem. This resulted in automated onboard safety checks shutting down the cryocooler. It was restored to operation on 25 November, and engineers began working on a permanent software fix for deployment in January 2019.
On 15 August 2019, GOES-17 experienced a brief "spacecraft anomaly" from about 1345Z to 1700Z. This anomaly prevented delivery of all bands and scenes.
Objectives
NOAA's GOES-R series of satellites is designed to improve the forecasts of weather, ocean, and environment by providing faster and more detailed data, real-time images of lightning, and advanced monitoring of solar activities and space weather. GOES-17 can collect three times more data at four times image resolution, and scan the planet five times faster than previous probes.GOES-17 has the same instruments and capabilities as GOES-16, and will complement its work by scanning a different area of the world. GOES-17 will become GOES-West when it moves to 137.2° west longitude and cover the west coast of the continental US, Alaska, Hawaii, and much of the Pacific Ocean. These two satellites are expected to monitor most of the Western Hemisphere and detect natural phenomena and hazards in almost real-time.
Its capabilities will allow better:
- fire track and intensity estimation
- detection of low cloud/fog
- tropical cyclone track and intensity forecasts
- monitoring of smoke and dust
- air quality warnings and alerts
- transportation safety and aviation route planning
- advanced monitoring of atmospheric river events that can cause flooding and mudslides
Instruments
The instrument suite of GOES-17 is identical to that of GOES-16. It includes:Earth sensing
Advanced Baseline Imager
The Advanced Baseline Imager was built by Harris Corporation Space and Intelligence Systems for the GOES-R line of satellites for imaging Earth's weather, climate and environment. Key subcontractors for the ABI instrument included BAE Systems, Babcock Incorporated, BEI Technologies, DRS Technologies, L-3 Communications SSG-Tinsley and Northrop Grumman Space Technology, and Orbital ATK. The imaging capabilities of the ABI are superior to previous imagers in several ways.Spectral resolution
This instrument has 16 bands :2 Visible Bands:
- Band 1:
- Band 2:
- Band 3:
- Band 4:
- Band 5:
- Band 6:
- Band 7:
- Band 8:
- Band 9:
- Band 10:
- Band 11:
- Band 12:
- Band 13:
- Band 14:
- Band 15:
- Band 16:
Temporal resolution
- Imaging of entire western hemisphere occurs every 5 to 15 minutes, while previously this was a scheduled event, with at most three photos per hour.
- Imaging of the continental United States once every 5 minutes, compared to one every 15 minutes in previous satellites
- One detailed image over some box every thirty seconds, a capability previous imagers did not have
Spatial resolution
Geostationary Lightning Mapper
The Geostationary Lightning Mapper is used for measuring lightning activity. To do this, it considers a single channel in the NIR constantly, even during the day, to catch flashes from lightning.The sensor has a 1372×1300 pixel CCD, with an spatial resolution. The GLM has a frame rate of 2 milliseconds, meaning it considers the entire study area 500 times every second.
Development of the GLM was contracted to the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center in Palo Alto, California.
Solar imaging
- Solar Ultraviolet Imager for observing coronal holes, solar flares and coronal mass ejection source regions
- Extreme Ultraviolet and X-ray Irradiance Sensors for monitoring solar irradiance in the upper atmosphere. It was built at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at Boulder, Colorado. It has three separate sensors: one for X-ray, one for extreme ultraviolet and a third one which is a combination of X-ray and extreme ultraviolet.
- The sensors aboard EXIS, XRS and EUVS, monitor solar flares in order to give warning of events strong enough to cause radio blackouts and both are used to make space weather predictions. More specifically, XRS monitors the X-ray variability from the Sun, and EUVS looks for short and long time scale variability in extreme-ultraviolet output from the Sun; both instruments intend to give a more clear picture of the Sun's varying influence on Earth's upper atmosphere.
Space environment measuring
- Space Environment In-Situ Suite for monitoring proton, electron and heavy ion fluxes at geosynchronous orbit
- Magnetometer for the space environment magnetic field that controls charged particle dynamics in the outer region of the magnetosphere
Transponders
- The Geostationary Search and Rescue for relaying distress signals from users in difficulty to search and rescue centers
- Data Collection and Interrogation Service for data collection from in-situ Data Collection Platforms