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A decade after launch, ERS-2's mission continues
 
21 April 2005

Viewing results from a decade of ERS-2:

The spacecraft: ERS-2 was launched from French Guiana on an Ariane 4 during 21 April 1995. A successor to ERS-1, it carried one new instrument, the Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment (GOME).

Flood: ERS-2 has often been used in the context of the International Charter on Space and Major Disasters. This ERS-2 SAR image shows the confluence of Elbe and Vltava rivers in the Czech republic, north of Prague. It is a multitemporal composite view combining an ERS-2 image acquired before flooding (07 August 1998) and an ERS-2 image acquired during flooding (16 August 2002).

Scatterometer: ERS-2 carries a C-band scatterometer, capable of measuring ocean surface wind fields even in the fiercest of weathers. On 23 April 2004, around midnight to the west of Ireland, a complex low was developing. The red arrows show near-real time ERS-2 scatterometer wind speeds up to 15 m/s and a cyclonic wind direction. There is a significant improvement on the three-hour forecast (blue arrows) which shows only one cyclonic centre and no shear line.

Rainforest deforestation: Deforestation areas in Rondonia, Brazil, appear in light-coloured linear features of relatively high temperatures, in this thermal image from ERS-2's Along Track Scanning Radiometer (ATSR). Courtesy Leicester University.

Ground stations involved in ERS-2 data acquisition: Since the failure of the satellite's Low Bit Rate onboard recorder in 2003, a growing global network of ground stations has been voluntarily receiving and distributing its data in near-real time.

Ozone Monitoring: The GOME instrument on ERS-2 provided the first European trace gas measurements from space, enabling observations of high latitude 'ozone holes' at both latitudes. Because the data are available on a near-real time basis, they can be used to monitor events when low levels of ozone lead to an increase in the risk from the Sun's ultraviolet radiation.

Sea Surface Temperature: ERS-2 Along Track Scanning Radiometer (ATSR) image of the Gulf Stream off the US East Coast. Warmer waters are red, with colder northern waters shown in blue and green.

Ocean Wave Height: ERS-2's SAR sensor in Wave Mode can be used to derive average ocean wave height. In addition raw 'imagettes' are now being used by researchers to detect individual high 'monster' waves.

Land Cover Changes world map: Seasonal variation of vegetation response to ERS-2's scatterometer instrument, supporting climate change studies.

El Nino: The combination of ERS-2's ATSR and Radar Altimeter mapped temperature and height abnormalities arising from the 1997 El Nino event in the Pacific.

Credits: ESA

 
 
ERS-2 composite highlighting tsunami damage
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 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 980 kb)
This view of Little Nicobar Island is part of a multitemporal composite of an ERS-1 SAR radar image acquired 21 December 1992 and ERS-2 image acquired 12 January 2005. The image is used to highlight the massive damage done to the west coasts of the Nicobar Islands during the December 2004 tsunami disaster, seen here in red.

Credits: ESA
 
 
Tsunami
An uprooted tree lies on the beach as damaged buildings of Indian Air Force officers, where more than 100 people reportedly were killed by tidal waves, is seen in background, in Nicobar, in India's southeastern Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Wednesday, Dec. 29, 2004. More than 75,000 people have been killed across south and southeast Asia, and as far as Somalia on Africas east coast following a massive earthquake close to Indonesia, which triggered devastating tsunamis.

Credits: AP Photo/Manish Swarup
 
  ERS-2 acquisitions for InSAR analysis
 
ERS image of Etna
ERS-derived images of the volcano Etna in Italy, summer 2001. Using precise techniques known as SAR Interferometry (InSAR), researchers have been able to monitor the movements of Etna for over 10 years including the eruption in 1993. A digital terrain model of the volcano and measurements of geophysical parameters, such as the volcanic mouth deflation, were already generated in 1995 by making use of complex interferometric techniques applied to ERS SAR images. ERS-2 SAR image data were then collected and processed to analyse the 2001 eruption.
 
 
Venice
Results from ERS-2 SAR Interferometry performed as part of the VENEZIA project. The space data show that part of Venice is sinking millimetre by millimetre into the sea - more in the red and violet areas than in the blue and green. Such details help concentrate structural protection measures in the places where they are most needed.
Credits: GAMMA/ESA

Credits: Gamma/ESA
 
  Near-real time results for weather forecasting and ozone monitoring
 
Ozone hole changes
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 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 961 kb)
Changes in the ozone hole over the Antarctic across six years measured by the GOME instrument on ERS-2

Credits: DLR
 
  ERS-2's fall and rise
 
Oil slick off Sweden
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 HI RES JPG (Size: 258 kb)
An ERS-2 SAR image reveals an oil slick off Sweden (bottom right).

Credits: ESA
 
 
Sulfur dioxide emission measurements over China
Sulfur dioxide emission over China as measured by GOME. High sulfur dioxide values can be seen in the basin of Si-Chuan, which does not allow a diffusion of the emitted smog from its source. (Image: University Bremen)
 
  Working with other spacecraft
 
ATSR-2 image of Etna
Image acquired of the Mount Etna eruption on 28 October 2002 by the Along-Track Scanning Radiometer 2 (ATSR-2)on ESA's ERS-2 spacecraft

Credits: ESA
 
  ERS-2's future
 
ERS satellite
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 HI RES JPG (Size: 378 kb)
Like its predecessor ERS-1 (launched in July 1991 by Ariane 4, the ERS-2 satellite (launched on 21 April 1995 also by Ariane 4) monitors the ground day and night under all weather conditions thanks to its powerful sharp-eyed, cloud-piercing radars. ERS-2 also carries an instrument to help monitor the ozone layer.

Credits: ESA
 
 
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In depth
Earthnet: ERS-2 Tenth AnniversaryERS-2 Tenth Anniversary Brochure (PDF)International Charter on Space and Major DisastersGMES
Related links
KNMIEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF)TEMIS
 
 
 
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