- All Categories
- Data
- News
- Missions
- Events
- Tools
- Activities
- Instruments
- Campaigns
- Documents
News - Success Stories
Publication of Coastal Current Intrusions from Satellite Altimetry
A new study entitled “Coastal current intrusions from satellite altimetry” has just been published in the journal Remote Sensing.
Event - Workshop
2nd Space for Hydrology Workshop
The workshop aimed to assess the current stage of knowledge and activities in space-based hydrological observations and to exchange knowledge and know
Event - Meeting
VH-RODA and CEOS SAR workshop
The workshop provided an open forum for the presentation and discussion of current status and future developments related to the calibration and validation
News - Success Stories
CryoTEMPO-EOLIS Products Now Available for Iceland, Svalbard, and the Canadian Arctic
Land-ice monitoring via Earth Observation methods in general, and altimetry in particular, are essential for tracking the current status of ice volume
Instrument - Scatterometers
SAR (ERS) Processor Releases
Processor Releases It should be noted that for SAR, each product ordered is processed directly from the raw data, using the current version of the SAR
Event - Workshop
SEASAR 2006
Assess wave mode user requirements Formulate recommendations for algorithm and new products development To present ESA studies results on wind, wave and currents
News - Data Release news
CryoSat Ocean Baseline C reprocessed data available
The reprocessing activity is currently progressing and we are planning to publish batches of six months of data every 20 days.
Activity - Quality
SLAP
Currently, in excess of 701,000 Level 1 TM and 84,000 Level 1 ETM+ products have been reprocessed and released under the SLAP project.
News - Data Release news
New CryoSat BUFR products for the meteorological community
The current CryoSat Ocean Processor is able to generate Near-real-time Ocean Products (NOP) with a latency of 2-3 hours after sensing.
News - Success Stories
CRYO2ICE over Antarctica: revealing further insight on changing ice
The CryoSat-2 satellite is currently being aligned with ICESat-2 over Antarctica, unlocking fresh possibilities in the wealth of new information being
News - Operational News
Delay in the production of Cryo-TEMPO EOLIS operational data
In particular, the following datasets are currently not available on the Science Server: along-track point products: missing data for all regions from
News - General News
CRYO2ICE is now on Earth Online
The resulting data will have applications in the fields of sea ice, land ice, polar ocean currents, inland water and atmosphere.
News - Thematic area articles
Satellite data central to ocean monitoring
are equipped with various microwave monitoring instruments, optical imagers, and infrared radiometers, which can map ocean variables related to ocean currents
Instrument - Radar Altimeters
RA (ERS)
operational modes (ocean or ice) the RA provided information on significant wave height; surface wind speed; sea surface elevation, which relates to ocean currents
News - Data Release news
New reprocessing of datasets celebrates 30 years of ERS
For each surface, the experts will use our current knowledge acquired over 30 years of experience, to improve the ERS altimetric and radiometric data as
News - Success Stories
COP26 fuels interest in satellite data
However, satellite data from operational and non-operational ESA missions provide long-term Earth observational records, giving essential context to current
News - Operational News
CryoSat - Geographical Mode Mask 4.0 released
SAR Interferometric (SARIn) (purple) mode is used over steeply sloping ice-sheet margins, over some geostrophic ocean currents and over small ice caps
Event - Workshop
IDEAS-QA4EO Cal/Val Workshop #2
Format - Virtual meeting (Webex), reports from all IDEAS-QA4EO members + discussion session Goal - Reviewing current status of IDEAS-QA4EO Cal/Val projects
Instrument - Scatterometers
SAR (ERS)
Processor Releases It should be noted that for SAR, each product ordered is processed directly from the raw data, using the current version of the SAR
Mission - Heritage Missions
ERS Radar Course 1
Therefore, microwaves easily penetrate clouds, and images can be acquired independently of the current weather conditions.