George B
Extinct but not forgotten Staff Member
The section you quote points out that its was to collect information on the characteristics of aerosols nd their effect on climate, not the SOURCE of them - you really need to stop trying to pass one thing off as another!!
the instrumentation package consisted of -
Aerosol Polarimetry Sensor
the Cloud camera:
and the total Irradiance monitor:
So ther is no evidence ther about the technology to identify the source of sulfur compounds.
And it seems to me to be primae facae evidene that hte technology to measure the climate change effects of clouds, aerosols and irradiation is quiet good - if only we can get the rockets to work OK!!
Sorry to disagree . . .
Raytheon’s Aerosol Polarimetry Sensor was designed to collect global aerosol data for climate scientists during NASA’s 3-year Glory mission. It is the most advanced polarimeter ever to fly in space — and the only instrument able to distinguish various types of natural aerosols from the man-made black carbon and sulfate aerosols in Earth’s atmosphere.
http://www.raytheon.com/capabilities/products/gloryaps/