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MetOp MetOp objectives
For this purpose MetOp's instruments have a wide range of remote sensing capabilities:
Sounding instruments typically provide vertical temperature and humidity profiles through the Earth's troposphere and stratosphere. Infrared sounders have reduced capability in cloudy conditions; however, sounders operating at microwave frequencies are capable of penetrating cloud cover and complement the infrared data.
Instruments:
Visible and infrared radiometers typically provide cloud imagery for weather forecasting applications. They also provide radiance data to calculate sea-surface temperatures.
Instrument:
The MetOp sounder and radiometer suite provides an extended range of products used by meteorologists and climatologists, such as ocean-surface and land-surface measurements, sea-ice coverage and condition, cloud fraction and top height, precipitable water and water vapour in the atmosphere, and atmospheric ozone.
Instruments:
Provides global data on speed and direction of winds over the ocean surface; additional products include sea-ice cover, snow cover and vegetation density.
Instrument:
Ultraviolet and visible spectrometry of solar reflection through the Earth's atmosphere provides ozone profiles in the troposphere and stratosphere; further data includes trace gases, Earth albedo and aerosol as well as cloud fraction and top height.
Instrument:
Additional services
Receives and disseminates data and location of in-situ meteorological observations from balloons, ocean buoys and other similar ground-based data collection platforms to a central processing site.
Instrument:
As part of an international satellite agreement, MetOp carries a search and rescue payload that re-broadcasts distress alerts and the location of emergency transmitters to rescue authorities. Several beacon types are supported covering ship and aircraft as well as personal locators.
Instruments:
Supports the routine monitoring of low-Earth orbit charged particles.
Instrument
Supports global-scale forecasting by providing data to an X-band ground station for further dissemination by the EUMETSAT Polar System to the meteorological services within two and a quarter hours of the observations being made. Space to Ground Link: X-band
Provides direct user access to local terrestrial and atmospheric conditions in real-time by transmitting to local reception stations as MetOp passes overhead.
Space to Ground Links: HRPT/LRPT
Last update: 19 April 2006
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