EMIT Inside SpaceX Falcon 9 Trunk Ahead of Transport

2022-05-29 18:34:07 By : Ms. Mandy Xiao

The Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation (EMIT) mission instrument (left) sits in the "trunk" that will travel aboard SpaceX's 25th cargo resupply mission – planned for June 7, 2022 – to the International Space Station. This image was taken May 3, 2022, at SpaceX's Dragonland facility in Florida. Developed at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California and launching from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, EMIT will map the world's mineral-dust sources, gathering information about particle color and composition as it orbits over the planet's dry, sparsely vegetated regions.

After being mounted on the space station, EMIT will collect measurements of 10 important surface minerals – hematite, goethite, illite, vermiculite, calcite, dolomite, montmorillonite, kaolinite, chlorite, and gypsum – in arid regions between 50-degree south and north latitudes in Africa, Asia, North and South America, and Australia. The data EMIT collects will help scientists better understand the role of airborne dust particles in heating and cooling Earth's atmosphere on global and regional scales.

The mirror-like side radiator panels are designed to keep the instrument's interior electronics and optics at a low enough temperature to work optimally. The white covering will prevent the spread of the heat the instrument generates, keeping it from affecting the space station and nearby instruments.

EMIT will be one of two pieces of equipment transported to the space station in the external cargo "trunk" on SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket. The other (left) is a Battery Charge/Discharge Unit.

EMIT Loaded Into SpaceX Falcon 9 Trunk Before Transport

EMIT's Components Come Together at JPL

Global Mineral Dust Source Regions to Be Measured by EMIT

Soil, Sutures, and Climate Modeling Among Investigations Riding SpaceX CRS-25 Dragon to International Space Station

NASA’s ECOSTRESS Detects ‘Heat Islands’ in Extreme Indian Heat Wave

International Satellite to Track Impacts of Small Ocean Currents

From Weather Forecasting to Climate Change, NASA’s AIRS Builds a Legacy

NASA’s EMIT Will Map Tiny Dust Particles to Study Big Climate Impacts

Clusters of Weather Extremes Will Increase Risks to Corn Crops, Society

California Field Campaign Helping Scientists Protect Diverse Ecosystems

NASA Finds New Way to Monitor Underground Water Loss

Surface Water and Ocean Topography

JPL is a federally funded research and development center managed for NASA by Caltech.