ESAEducationHomeWeather and ClimateGlobal ChangeNatural Disasters
   
Coastal change
Danube Delta change detectionOil spills
Deforestation
Bardia National ParkCongo River BasinKameng-Sonitpur Elephant ReserveKilimanjaroRondoniaShillong and Guwahati
Ice
Antarctica 2003Climate change and glaciersGlacier analysis using radar imageryGlacial retreat in the AlpsGlacier Ice FlowMonitoring of glaciers in the HimalayasRemote sensing of ice and snow
Urbanisation
CairoCity of KathmanduCórdobaHimalayasKathmandu ValleyLagos
Vegetation
Annapurna Conservation AreaLost in the AndesNgorongoro Conservation AreaNiger Inland DeltaVegetation in South America
 
 
 
 
Article Images
Continued - Cairo - Then and Now
 
 
  Measuring
 
ERS satellite
Download:
 HI-RES JPEG (Size: 378 kb)
Like its predecessor ERS-1 (launched in July 1991 by Ariane 4 and successfully put into orbit at an altitude of some 780 km), the ERS-2 satellite launched on 21.04.95 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.
 


Cairo
IntroductionBackground
Exercises
Worksheet introductionExercises using Landsat dataExercises using Ikonos dataCairo - Then and now
Links
References
Eduspace - Software
LEOWorks 3LEOWorks 3 TutorialArcExplorer
Eduspace - Download
cairo.zipcairo_ikonos.zipTechnical information about Landsat bands (PDF)
 
 
 
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