Washington: NASA, European Space Agency and South Korea have joined their hands to set up a 'virtual constellation' of space instruments that will track global air quality each hour.
The first space instrument launched as a part of the collaboration was the South Korean Geostationary Environment Monitoring Spectrometer which was shot into the geostationary orbit on February 18.
The instrument has been mounted on a satellite belonging to Korea which is assigned the task of monitoring the ocean surface.
Reportedly, NASA revealed in a recent briefing that in 2022, it would be launching a nearly identical device piggybacked on a communication satellite.
Following its peers, ESA is set to send two instruments into space that would join its pre-existing fleet of air quality tracking satellites. The first launch is scheduled for 2023.