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News Measuring wind over the oceans with ASCAT
In the first of a series of short articles focusing on the new European instruments carried on MetOp, we take a look at how the ASCAT (Advanced Scatterometer) instrument will measure winds over the oceans to improve weather forecasting and climate research. MetOp, due to lift-off in just a week's time, will be the second largest European Earth Observation satellite ever launched. Developed by ESA and EUMETSAT as part of a joint undertaking, this new satellite is dedicated to operational meteorology and carries an impressive array of instrumentation to measure various components of the atmosphere. Some of the instruments have a well-proven heritage being flown on U.S. satellites already delivering valuable data. Five, however, are state-of-the-art instruments, and these in particular are expected to greatly enhance Europe's remote-sensing capabilities. One such instrument is ASCAT.
Winds over the sea disturb its surface and this modifies its radar backscattering characteristics in a particular way. These backscattering properties are well known and are dependent on both wind speed and direction with respect to the point from which the sea surface is observed. ASCAT exploits this fact by transmitting pulses of microwave energy (at 5.255 GHz, C-band) towards the surface of the Earth and recording the resulting echoes.
Besides the well-known use in wind-vector determination, the ASCAT instrument will also provide very useful infomation for climate monitoring and will find applications in a number of other areas such as the monitoring of vegetation, soil moisture and ice cover. MetOp's European instruments: ASCAT (Advanced Scatterometer) to measure wind speed and direction over the ocean. GOME-2 (Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment-2) to measure concentrations of atmospheric ozone and other gases. GRAS (Global Navigation Satellite System Receiver for Atmospheric Sounding) to measure atmospheric temperature and humidity. IASI (Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer) to measure atmospheric temperature and moisture, and trace gases such as carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, methane, ozone.
MHS (Microwave Humidity Sounder) to measure atmospheric humidity and temperature.
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