• → European Space Agency

      • Space for Europe
      • Space News
      • Space in Images
      • Space in Videos
    • About Us

      • Welcome to ESA
      • DG's News and Views
      • For Member State Delegations
      • Business with ESA
      • ESA Exhibitions
      • ESA Publications
      • Careers at ESA
    • Our Activities

      • Space News
      • Observing the Earth
      • Human Spaceflight
      • Launchers
      • Navigation
      • Space Science
      • Space Engineering
      • Operations
      • Technology
      • Telecommunications & Integrated Applications
    • For Public

    • For Media

      • Media
      • ESA TV
      • Videos for professionals
      • Photos
    • For Educators

    • For Kids

    • ESA

    • Observing the Earth

    • Understanding Our Planet

    • Securing Our Environment

    • Benefiting Our Economy

    • About benefiting our economy
    • Space & Practical Benefits

      • Natural resources exploitation

        • Overview
        • Hydropower & reservoir management
        • Oil, gas and mineral exploration
        • Guiding fishing fleets
        • Renewable energy development
      • Land use efficiency

        • Overview
        • Agricultural forecasting
        • Forest management
        • Urban monitoring
      • Supporting transport routing

        • Overview
        • Optimising shipping routes
        • Navigation through sea ice
        • Road & rail corridor planning
      • Weather forecasting

        • Overview
        • Developing Europe's weather satellites
        • Metocean for offshore activities
    • Space & Sustainable Development

      • Economic development

        • Overview
      • Social development

        • Overview
      • Environment

        • Overview
    • About Observing the Earth

      • How does Earth Observation work?
      • How to get Earth observation data
      • Integrating Earth Observation in your job
      • Earth Observation users speak
    • Opportunities with us

      • Education & training
      • International cooperation
      • Milestones & announcements
    • Multimedia

      • Image Gallery
      • Video Gallery
      • Online resources
      • RSS feeds

    ESA > Our Activities > Observing the Earth > Benefiting Our Economy

    Thanks to ESA, KNMI offers a UV forecasting Service

    Global clear-sky UV index
    Global clear-sky UV index 26 March 2001
    26 March 2001

    A unique new service which harnesses satellite data to powerful high-speed computing could soon lead to much improved weather forecasts and help make basking in the sun a lot safer.

    The "fast ozone profile" service developed by the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) within the ESA Data User Programme is a world first. It can deliver a three-dimensional map of ozone in the atmosphere worldwide within a few hours.

    GOME Fast Delivery Ozone Profiles
    GOME fast delivery ozone profile for 23 March 2001

    Ozone helps to shield the Earth’s surface - and sunbathers - from the harmful ultraviolet light rays of the sun. If an ozone hole opens above Europe in the summer, for example, then the risk of sunburn and in the longer term, skin cancer, increases dramatically for sun-worshippers at the beach or on the piste alike. The speed of the new service makes it possible to broadcast warnings far more quickly, and to make more accurate forecasts of potential danger.

    What matters to sunbathers is the total amount of ozone above their heads. But the new service is more sophisticated still. Rather than simply calculating the amount of ozone in a tower of air reaching from ground to space, the new service can plot a profile of the density of ozone at various altitudes.


    Wind fields
    Impact on wind field

    "The main reason for making this service available is to enable the creation of improved weather forecasts," says Ronald van der A, a senior project scientist at KNMI. "Ozone moves with the wind in the high atmosphere – we call it a stratospheric tracer. Because we can generate these three-dimensional profiles quickly, we can create moving maps from a series of snapshots, and so start to model the behaviour of the stratosphere much more accurately."

    "Three years ago, most people thought that this could not be feasible," remembers ESA’s Claus Zehner, who extended the ERS ground segment to provide GOME measurements very fast to KNMI for the development of this new service to users. "The big challenge is the computation," Ronald van der A explains. "To calculate total ozone, you’re using only part of the spectrum of light scattered back by the Earth’s atmosphere. But to generate the profile, you look at a much wider spectrum, each segment of which corresponds to a ‘backscattering layer’ at a particular altitude in the atmosphere. Again, in itself this is not such a big task - the real breakthrough is to be able to extract this profile information from the data in near real-time. We can publish the profiles with three hours of the data being gathered."

    High UV Radiation over South America due to the Ozone Hole
    High UV Radiation over South America due to the Ozone Hole

    With the Fast Delivery service, data are acquired and processed up to total ozone columns/global maps within three hours after acquisition, and are then used in a model to forecast the ozone and an algorithm is applied to give the UV index, allowing accurate forecasting within 24 hours.

    Although it still takes three days to cover the global surface, the near-real-time processing allows a complete global picture to be made available in the same timeframe, which is a major advance over any previous efforts. “Equally”, adds Ronald van der A, "because we can see events developing quickly, if we spot a hole appearing, we can alert local scientists who can then monitor the event hour by hour using equipment carried aboard specially-launched balloons, called sondes."

    Record Ozone Hole Extension during 2000
    Record Ozone Hole Extension during 2000

    The service is now live, providing GOME ozone profiles to scientists around Europe including a service to offer UV index forecasting as well. "And we will certainly continue the service when Envisat is launched," emphasises van der A. "The SCIAMACHY instrument aboard Envisat may well allow us to improve the quality still further."

    To take a closer look before you decide whether to apply factor 15 or factor 50 sunblock, go to:

    Ozone profiles on-line:
    http://www.knmi.nl/gome_fd/prof/profile.html

    UV-index forecast on-line:
    http://www.knmi.nl/gome_fd/tm3/uv.html

    Notes for editors

    GOME is the Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment aboard the European Remote-Sensing satellite, ERS-2, launched in 1995 and continuing to make an important contribution to environmental monitoring and our understanding of the physical and chemical processes underlying Earth systems, on the global and local scale alike.

    SCIAMACHY – the SCanning Imaging Absorption Spectrometer for Atmospheric CartograpHY, is one of the 10 instruments aboard ESA’s new environmental satellite, Envisat, ready for launch this summer.

    Rate this

    Views

    Share

    • Currently 0 out of 5 Stars.
    • 1
    • 2
    • 3
    • 4
    • 5
    Rating: 0/5 (0 votes cast)

    Thank you for rating!

    You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

    Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

    54
    Tweet
    • Related news
      • Satellite sniffs out chemical traces of atmospheric pollution
        • New European capabilities for monitoring the ozone hole presented in Gothenburg, 16-20 October
        • ESA press release 5/2000
        • Cold spell in the stratosphere (PR47-99)
        • Related links
        • Ozone profiles on-line
        • UV-index forecast on-line
        • GOME homepage
        • GOME at DLR
        • Earthnet SCIAMACHY Introduction
        • ERS homepage
        • Earthnet
        • Measuring the ozone hole with ERS/GOME

    Connect with us

    • RSS
    • Youtube
    • Twitter
    • Flickr
    • G+
    • Facebook
    • Livestream
    • Subscribe
    • App Store
    • LATEST ARTICLES
    • · Earth Explorers take centre stage …
    • · The fast winds of Venus are gettin…
    • · ExoMars 2016 set to complete const…
    • · Herschel ends operations as orbiti…
    • · Europe’s largest spaceship reache…
    • FAQ

    • Jobs at ESA

    • Site Map

    • Contacts

    • Terms and conditions