April 25, 2012

Announcement from the Jason-1 Project (on 23 April):
 
The Jason-1 project teams at CNES and NASA/JPL have now completed all prerequisite tasks required to enable a safe recovery of the mission from the safe hold it has been in since 3 March 2012.  This morning, on Monday, 23 April, CNES began to command the satellite  into a nadir orientation and will then begin the restart of payload instruments on Tuesday, 24 April.  CNES and NASA management, through the Joint Steering Group, have directed the Jason-1 Project to then  begin a series of maneuvers to reduce the orbit semi-major  axis by 12.6 km.  This will place Jason-1 into a new long-repeat orbit at roughly 1323.4 km altitude.  The exact “geodetic orbit” parameters will be forwarded to you in the near future.  If all mission operations proceed as planned and no new anomalies are encountered, the Project expects to resume Jason-1 science and operational data delivery by 4 May 2012.  The move from the altimetry reference orbit has been a difficult decision to take, but it also signals the start of an exciting  new chapter in the extraordinary mission of Jason-1.

Very best regards.
 
Thierry Guinle & Glenn Shirtliffe
CNES & NASA/JPL Jason-1 Project Managers

Additional information from PO.DAAC User Services:
 
This new "geodetic orbit" will greatly impact the science quality of operational and other datasets.  Until a thorough cal/val has been performed (which could take several months) please use the new data with caution.  Once the data become available they will be located in FTP folders ending with _geodetic, however, since the project is still working out logistics the folder names may change.  Another announcement with more details will be sent out when the data become operational.

For further questions please email podaac@podaac.jpl.nasa.gov
 
We apologize if you receive multiple copies of this announcement