ESA – MERIS: plankton blooms https://www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Images/2012/02/MERIS_plankton_blooms
MERIS: plankton blooms
Applications MERIS: plankton blooms 26/08/2011
MERIS: plankton blooms
Applications MERIS: plankton blooms 26/08/2011
Launched from Kourou in French Guiana on the night of 28 February 2002, ESA’s Envisat spacecraft marks its fifth year in space. Having orbited Earth more than 26 000 times, the world’s largest and most complex environmental satellite ever launched has travelled a distance of more than 1 000 000 000 kilometres, nearly the equivalent of travelling to Jupiter and back.
temperature, sea surface height and even tiny marine plankton
ESA PR 43-2006. Have you ever wanted to track natural events in progress, such as fires, floods and volcanic eruptions, or simply explore the planet through the eyes of a satellite? ESA has created a website, MIRAVI, which gives access to the most recently acquired images from the world’s largest Earth Observation satellite, Envisat.
Plankton bloom off the coast of Norway Although the
Ever wanted to see what volcanic eruptions, dust storms and changing ice glaciers look like from space? The European Space Agency (ESA) has created a special layer of content that will appear in Google Earth, enabling people to see over 130 new ESA satellite images including natural phenomena and manmade landmarks such as the Palm Islands in Dubai.
A plankton bloom across Ireland captured by Envisat
ESA Info 11-2001. Early in 2002 an Ariane-5 rocket will launch the largest and most advanced Earth observation satellite ever built in Europe from the European Spaceport at Kourou in French Guiana. From an altitude of 800 kilometres Envisat will deliver images and data that will help us better understand and more effectively protect the Earth.
Europe’s eyes in space also measures the plankton movements