homehome Home chatchat Notifications


How a suitcase-sized NASA device could map shrinking aquifers from space

Next‑gen gravity maps could help track groundwater, ice loss, and magma.

Jordan Strickler
April 17, 2025 @ 7:29 pm

share Share

A map of Earth’s gravity. Red indicates areas of greater gravitational pull, while blue indicates areas that exert less. (Credit: NASA)

The pull of gravity feels rock steady, yet it wobbles from place to place. Even a single mountain or a shrinking aquifer can tip the scales ever so slightly.

Now, a new satellite instrument from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory is designed to catch those minute shifts. Coined the Quantum Gravity Gradiometer Pathfinder (QGGPf), it packs a physics lab into a box no bigger than a carry-on suitcase and is slated to fly later this decade.

Inside the device, two clouds of rubidium atoms are chilled to just a fraction above absolute zero. At that temperature, the atoms act more like overlapping waves than tiny balls. As the satellite loops Earth, each atom cloud “falls” within the chamber. If one cloud accelerates just a fraction faster than the other, the instrument records a stronger local pull.

“With atoms, I can guarantee that every measurement will be the same,” said Sheng Wey Chiow, an experimental physicist at JPL. “We are less sensitive to environmental effects.”

Current gravity measuring missions such as GRACE-FO rely on paired satellites that measure tiny changes in their separation to chart gravity. QGGPf aims to gather comparable details from a single craft approximately 0.3 cubic yards (0.25 cubic meters) in volume and weighing only about 275 pounds (125 kilograms). If the pathfinder works, a full-scale mission could detect features 10 times smaller than today’s systems can resolve.

Why the data matters

Gravity maps reveal what lies beneath the surface. Hydrologists watch them to gauge groundwater loss during drought. Geophysicists follow the numbers to see where ice sheets are thinning. Emergency managers study the data for clues that magma is on the move.

“We could determine the mass of the Himalayas using atoms,” said Jason Hyon, chief technologist for Earth Science at JPL and director of JPL’s Quantum Space Innovation Center. Hyon and colleagues laid out the concepts behind their Quantum Gravity Gradiometer Pathfinder (QGGPf) instrument in a recent paper in EPJ Quantum Technology.

Being able to track any changes with a solo, compact satellite would not only trim costs but also let NASA revisit the same spots more often.

The test-run launch will be a shakedown cruise for several untried technologies, including lasers that steer and measure the atom clouds. JPL is working with AOSense, Infleqtion, Vector Atomic and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center on the components.

If all goes well, the approach could be adapted for missions to the Moon or Mars, where mapping underground ice and rock layers is high on science wish lists.

“No one has tried to fly one of these instruments yet,” said Ben Stray, a postdoctoral researcher at JPL. “We need to fly it so that we can figure out how well it will operate, and that will allow us to not only advance the quantum gravity gradiometer, but also quantum technology in general.”

share Share

The Universe’s First “Little Red Dots” May Be a New Kind of Star With a Black Hole Inside

Mysterious red dots may be a peculiar cosmic hybrid between a star and a black hole.

Peacock Feathers Can Turn Into Biological Lasers and Scientists Are Amazed

Peacock tail feathers infused with dye emit laser light under pulsed illumination.

Helsinki went a full year without a traffic death. How did they do it?

Nordic capitals keep showing how we can eliminate traffic fatalities.

Scientists Find Hidden Clues in The Alexander Mosaic. Its 2 Million Tiny Stones Came From All Over the Ancient World

One of the most famous artworks of the ancient world reads almost like a map of the Roman Empire's power.

Ancient bling: Romans May Have Worn a 450-Million-Year-Old Sea Fossil as a Pendant

Before fossils were science, they were symbols of magic, mystery, and power.

This AI Therapy App Told a Suicidal User How to Die While Trying to Mimic Empathy

You really shouldn't use a chatbot for therapy.

This New Coating Repels Oil Like Teflon Without the Nasty PFAs

An ultra-thin coating mimics Teflon’s performance—minus most of its toxicity.

Why You Should Stop Using Scented Candles—For Good

They're seriously not good for you.

People in Thailand were chewing psychoactive nuts 4,000 years ago. It's in their teeth

The teeth Chico, they never lie.

To Fight Invasive Pythons in the Everglades Scientists Turned to Robot Rabbits

Scientists are unleashing robo-rabbits to trick and trap giant invasive snakes