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    ESA > Our Activities > Observing the Earth > The Living Planet Programme > Meteorological missions > MetOp

    About AMSU-A2

    AMSU-A2 instrument

    The Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit – A2 (AMSU-A2) is one of the complement of American instruments provided by NOAA to fly on MetOp-A, -B and –C.

    The AMSU-A2 measures scene radiance in the microwave spectrum. The data from this instrument is used in conjunction with the High-resolution Infrared Sounder (HIRS) instrument to calculate the global atmospheric temperature and humidity profiles from the Earth's surface to the upper stratosphere, at approximately 2-millibar pressure altitude (48 km). The data is used to provide precipitation and surface measurements including snow cover, sea-ice concentration and soil moisture.

    The instrument is a cross-track scanning total-power radiometer and is divided into two separate modules:

    • AMSU Module A-1 with channels 3 to 15
    • AMSU Module A-2 with channels 1 and 2

    Each module operates and interfaces with the spacecraft independently. Often both instrument modules are presented under the generic name of AMSU-A. AMSU-A1 and -2 were developed by Northrop Grumman (formerly Aerojet), Los Angeles, USA.


    The AMSU-A instrument has an IFOV of 3.3° at the half-power points providing a nominal spatial resolution at nadir of 48 km (29.8 mi). The antenna provides a cross-track scan, scanning ± 48.3° from nadir with a total of 30 Earth fields-of-view per scan line. The instrument completes one scan every 8 seconds. The footprint (resolution at nadir) is 50 km. The swath width is approximately 2000 km.

    Courtesy NOAA-L brochure, NOAA Observation of the Earth and its Environment – Survey of Missions and Sensors by: Dr H.J. Kramer

    Last update: 28 June 2006

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