Douglas Isbell Headquarters, Washington, DC October 18, 1997 (Phone: 202/358-1753) RELEASE: 97-238 NASA AND ARGENTINA SIGN AGREEMENTS ON FUTURE COOPERATION NASA Administrator Daniel S. Goldin and Dr. Conrado Franco Varotto, Executive Director of the Argentina National Commission on Space Activities (CONAE), signed memoranda of understanding (MOU) on the Satelite de Aplicaciones Cientificas (SAC)-C and (SAC)-A today in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Mr. Goldin was in Buenos Aires accompanying President Bill Clinton. SAC-C will conduct correlated observations of the Earth of interest to Argentina and the United States, and also will contribute directly to the NASA Mission to Planet Earth Program. SAC-C will entail the flight of an Argentine Multispectral Medium Resolution Scanner (MMRS) that will be used primarily by Argentina to monitor forest inventory in the Argentine region of Mesopotamia; predict agricultural production in the Pampean region; evaluate and elaborate maps of the Patagonian desert; monitor pollution; evaluate changes in the Chacoan forests and correlate these changes with atmospheric changes in CO2; and examine circulation and productivity in marine coastal areas. SAC-C also will carry magnetic field instruments provided by the Danish Meteorological Institute, which will include a NASA-provided scalar magnetometer to monitor the main geomagnetic field, map lithospheric magnetic anomalies and study ionospheric current systems. A NASA-provided Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) receiver will determine the position of the spacecraft to the subdecimeter level, provide timing control, provide estimates of atmospheric index of refraction and atmospheric temperature and water content, contribute to improved estimates of the intermediate wavelength gravity field, map ionospheric structure, and provide the first satellite-based tests of the ability to observe GPS signals reflected from the ocean surface for possible altimetry and scatterometry applications. NASA also will launch the satellite, currently scheduled for a Delta rocket, in May 1999. Mr. Goldin and Dr. Varotto signed the Spanish text of the SAC-C MOU. The English text of the MOU was signed at NASA Headquarters on Oct. 28, 1996. SAC-A will be launched as a hitchhiker payload from the Space Shuttle cargo bay in 1998 on the STS-88 mission, which also is the first Space Station assembly mission. The small Argentine-built satellite will test several new space technologies for the Argentine and U.S. space programs. A NASA-provided differential global positioning system (DGPS) will provide real-time autonomous attitude measurements for the satellite, ultimately simplifying the amount of ground processing required to control an orbiting satellite. Argentina will provide a Charge Coupled Device (CCD) camera to perform digital space photography, silicon solar cells that will be performance-tested on SAC-A, and a magnetometer to take scalar measurements of the Earth's magnetic field. Finally, SAC-A will test an Argentinean experiment to track endangered whale population migrations in the southern hemisphere. The signing of these agreements reflects the continued growth and importance of civil space cooperation between NASA and CONAE. Argentina opened the doors to a partnership in civil space with the establishment of CONAE in 1991. NASA and CONAE soon signed a framework agreement, and the level of cooperation between the two agencies has increased significantly since then. In addition to SAC-C and SAC-A, the two programs are now cooperating on ozone investigations and protein crystallography investigations aboard the Space Shuttle. -end-