IceCube - the diminutive spacecraft that deployed from the International Space Station (ISS) in May, last year - has demonstrated-in-space a commercial 883-Gigahertz radiometer capable of measuring critical atmospheric cloud ice properties at altitudes between five to 15 kilometres.
NASA scientists pioneered the use of submillimeter wavelength bands, which fall between the microwave and infrared on the electromagnetic spectrum, to sense ice clouds.
However, until IceCube, these instruments had flown only aboard high-altitude research aircraft. This meant scientists could gather data only in areas over which the aircraft flew.
"More importantly, it provides a global view on Earth's cloud-ice distribution," said Wu.
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Sensing atmospheric cloud ice requires scientists deploy instruments tuned to a broad range of frequency bands.
However, it is particularly important to fly submillimeter sensors.
This wavelength fills a significant data gap in the middle and upper troposphere where ice clouds are often too opaque for infrared and visible sensors to penetrate.
It also reveals data about the tiniest ice particles that cannot be detected clearly in other microwave bands.