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 Table Mountain Facility
JPL's Table Mountain Facility

The Table Mountain Facility (TMF) is a remote, high altitude facility that enables research in atmospheric science, optical communication and astronomy.

The major research areas are directed towards Sun-Earth System science, contributing atmospheric measurements that

  • Test and constrain models of stratospheric ozone depletion by providing key measurements of atmospheric trace species
  • Provide observations to determine and understand the physical and chemical state of the atmosphere as they relate to ozone and climate change
  • Provide observational evidence linking solar variability and atmospheric composition
  • Provide validation data for Earth Science satellites (such as Aura).

Science facilities include

  • Laser Remote Sensing (LIDAR) - Measures vertical profiles of atmospheric 03, temperature, aerosols, and H2O
  • Fourier Transform Ultraviolet Spectrometer - Measures total column abundances of OH, NO3, CO2, BrO
  • Medium-resolution UV-visible Grating Spectrograph- used in lunar occultation mode to measure NO3.

Table Mountain Observatory's 0.6- and 0.4-meter astronomical telescopes enable observations which include

  • High precision astrometry of satellites, asteroids and comets that are spacecraft mission targets
  • Confirmation and follow-up observations of asteroids and comets discovered by JPL's NEAT program and other hazardous asteroid search programs
  • Physical characterization of asteroids, comets, and planetary satellites that are targets of spacecraft missions, and newly discovered and potentially hazardous Near-Earth Objects.


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