Re: NASA Launches Climate Crisis Satellite Part 5
"Even 'Smokey Bear' is a sink," said Professor Scott Denning, an OCO science team associate at Colorado State University, referring to the US Forest Service's anti-fire mascot.
"By putting fires out in our western forests and allowing the wood to accumulate, we are actually sequestering CO2."
To identify those currently poorly understood - or "missing" - sinks, OCO's data will have to be combined with models of how the air is transported through the atmosphere.
The famous US forest mascot may have a part in the story
Ultimately, researchers will use the OCO maps to assess how well the sinks are likely to perform over time.
"[Different climate] models show very different CO2 levels in the atmosphere for the same human emissions. So even though people are producing the same emissions in each of these models, the resulting CO2 in the atmosphere is very different by the end of the century due to the differences in land and ocean behaviour," explained Professor Denning.
"This actually shows up at about 300 parts per million (ppm) of difference in the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere - remember, we're at about 385ppm today. So this is a big difference and is really quite important for understanding future climate."
The OCO team is working closely with the Japanese Gosat ("Ibuki") mission which launched its carbon observatory last month.
The orbits of the two spacecraft will cross six times each day.
The groups use different measurement approaches, which will provide a cross-check on each other's data. Both will take their calibration from ground stations which, although limited in number, can measure CO2 with much higher precision at their locality.
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk