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MetOp

Metop (Meteorological Operational satellite) is a series of three polar-orbiting meteorological satellites developed by the European Space Agency (ESA) and operated by the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT). The satellites form the space segment component of the overall EUMETSAT Polar System (EPS), which in turn is the European half of the EUMETSAT / NOAA Initial Joint Polar System (IJPS). The satellites carry a payload comprising 11 scientific instruments and two which support Cospas-Sarsat Search and Rescue services. In order to provide data continuity between Metop and NOAA Polar Operational Environmental Satellites (POES), several instruments are carried on both fleets of satellites.

Metop-A, launched on 19 October 2006, is Europe's first polar orbiting satellite used for operational meteorology. With respect to its primary mission of providing data for Numerical Weather Prediction, studies have shown that Metop-A data are measured as having the largest impact of any individual satellite platform on reducing 24-hour forecasting errors, and accounts for about 25% of the total impact on global forecast error reduction across all data sources.[1]

Each of the three satellites were originally intended to be operated sequentially, however good performance of the Metop-A and Metop-B satellites mean there was a period of all three satellite operating. EUMETSAT lowered the orbit of Metop-A and decommissioned the spacecraft in November 2021 [2]

The successor to the Metop satellites will be MetOp-SG, currently with the first MetOp SG-A satellite expected to be launched in 2025.[3]

Metop
Organization: EUMETSAT
Mission type: Meteorology / Climatology
Satellite of: Earth
Metop-A Launch: 19 October 2006
at 16:28:00 UTC
Soyuz ST Fregat
Baikonur Cosmodrome
Metop-B Launch: 17 September 2012
at 16:28:00 UTC
Soyuz ST Fregat
Baikonur Cosmodrome
Metop-C Launch: 7 November 2018
at 00:47:27 UTC
Soyuz ST Fregat
Guiana Space Centre
Dimensions: 6.2 x 3.4 x 3.4 metres (under the launcher fairing)
17.6 x 6.5 x 5.2 metres (deployed in orbit)
Mass: 4093 kg
Payload Mass: 812 kg
Webpage:
Orbital elements
Orbit: Sun-synchronous orbit
Inclination: 98.7° to the equator
Orbital period: 101.0 minutes
Ground Track Repeat Cycle: 29 Days / 412 Orbits
Mean Altitude: 817 km
Local Time of Ascending Node: 21:30
Metop-A International Designator: 2006-044A
Metop-B International Designator: 2012-049A
Metop-C International Designator: 2018-087A

Instruments edit

 
Metop-C's payload module being lowered into ESTEC's Large Space Simulator, 2017

The following instruments [4] are flown on board the Metop satellites:

Shared instruments edit

The following instruments are shared on the NPOES satellites which form the U.S. contribution to IJPS:

Metop specific instruments edit

The following instruments are flown exclusively on the Metop satellites:

Background edit

Metop has been developed as a joint undertaking between the European Space Agency (ESA) and European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT). Recognising the growing importance of Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) in weather forecasting, Metop was designed with a suite of instruments to provide NWP models with high resolution global atmospheric temperature and humidity structure. Data from Metop are additionally used for atmospheric chemistry and provision of long term data sets for climate records.

Metop heritage edit

The Metop satellites have a modular construction, comprising a Service Module, a Payload Module and a suite of instruments.

A SPOT heritage service module provides power (via solar array and five batteries for eclipse), attitude and orbit control, thermal regulation and Tracking, Telemetry and Command (TT&C). An Envisat heritage payload module provides common command and control and power buses for the instruments along with science data acquisition and transmission.

The suite of instruments are largely derived from precursors flown on the European Space Agency's European Remote-Sensing Satellite ERS / Envisat satellites or are fully recurrent units originally developed for NOAA's Television Infrared Observation Satellite (TIROS) series of polar-orbiting satellites.

Data acquisition edit

 
Satellite flare from Metop-A, May 2019

With the exception of Search and Rescue (SARSAT), which is a purely local mission with its own dedicated transmitter, all data from the MetOp Instruments are formatted and multiplexed by the Payload Module and either stored on a solid-state recorder for later transmission via an X-Band antenna, or directly transmitted to local users via High Rate Picture Transmission (HRPT) L-Band antenna.

The main Command and Data Acquisition (CDA) head is located at Svalbard Satellite Station in Norway. The high latitude of this station allows the global data stored in the solid state recorder of each satellite to be dumped via X-Band once per orbit. Each Metop satellite produces approximately 2 GB of raw data per orbit. Additionally, in order to improve timeliness of products, one of the operational satellites dumps the data from the descending part of the orbit over the McMurdo Station in Antarctica. Data are then trickle fed from the ground stations to EUMETSAT Headquarters in Darmstadt, Germany, where they are processed, stored and disseminated to various agencies and organisations with a latency of approximately 2 hours without the McMurdo ground station and 1 hour with Svalbard.

HRPT is used to provide a real-time direct readout local mission via a network of receivers on ground provided by cooperating organisations. Data from these stations is also transmitted to EUMETSAT and redistributed to provide a regional service with approximately 30 minutes latency. Due to radiation sensitivity of the HRPT hardware, the Metop-A HRPT does not operate over the polar regions or South Atlantic Anomaly.

Command and control edit

Command and Control of Metop is performed from the EPS Control Room at EUMETSAT Headquarters in Darmstadt, Germany. The control center is connected to the CDA in Svalbard which is used for S-Band ranging and doppler measurements (for orbit determination), acquisition of real-time house keeping telemetry and uplink of telecommands. The CDA at Svalbard, located at approximately 78° North, provides TT&C coverage on each orbit. Commands for routine operations are generally uplinked at each CDA contact, approximately 36 hours in advance of on-board execution. Orbit determination can also be performed using data from the GNSS Receiver for Atmospheric Sounding (GRAS) instrument. An independent back-up control center is also located at Instituto Nacional de Técnica Aeroespacial, near Madrid, Spain.

Mission profile edit

The Metop and NOAA satellites both carry a common set of core instruments. In addition, Metop carries a set of new European instruments, which measure atmospheric temperature and humidity with unprecedented accuracy along with profiles of atmospheric ozone and other trace gases. Wind speed and direction over the oceans will also be measured. It is expected that these new instruments will herald a significant contribution to the ever-growing need for fast and accurate global data to improve numerical weather prediction. This in turn will lead to more-reliable weather forecasts and, in the longer-term, help with monitoring changing climates more accurately.

In addition to its meteorological uses, it will provide imagery of land and ocean surfaces as well as search and rescue equipment to aid ships and aircraft in distress. A data relay system is also on board, linking up to buoys and other data collection devices.

Launch and deployment edit

 
Ground track of Metop-B, September 2012

Metop-A, the first operational European polar-orbiting meteorological satellite, was successfully launched on 19 October 2006 from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan using a Soyuz-ST Fregat launch vehicle, after six attempts. At just over 4000 kg and measuring 17.6 × 6.5 × 5.2 metres when in orbit, Metop is Europe's second-largest Earth-observation satellite, after Envisat which was launched in 2002.[5]

The first signal from the satellite was received at 18:35 BST on 20 October 2006, and it was confirmed that the satellite was in its nominally correct orbit with the solar panel deployed. Control of the satellite was with the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC — part of ESA) which had the responsibility of achieving the final positioning of the satellite, deployment of all the antennas and final reconfiguration of the satellite following necessary orbit control maneuvers. The satellite was handed over to EUMETSAT operations on 22 October 2006. The first image was received at 08:00 UTC on 25 October 2006 [6] — a visible light image of Scandinavia and Eastern Europe — but there was a six-month period of verification and calibration of the satellite and its instrument payload before it was declared operational. Before that point, the Met Office received data and started to test and then use it as input to the operational numerical weather prediction runs.

Metop-A was declared fully operational in mid-May 2007 and the full data of its 11 scientific instruments are available to its users on operational basis [7]

Metop-B was declared fully operational and pronounced to replace Metop-A as "EUMETSAT's prime operational SSO weather satellite" in April 2013.[8]

Metop-C was scheduled for launch towards the end of 2016,[9] which was postponed until 2017 [10] and was launched successfully on 7 November 2018.

Due to the longer than expected in-orbit performance of Metop-A and Metop-B, all three Metop spacecraft were operated simultaneously until decommissioning of Metop-A, Metop-B and eventually Metop-C. Metop spacecraft will be succeeded in their operational role by the MetOp Second Generation satellites. EUMETSAT began de-orbiting Metop-A in November 2021 [11]

GOME-2 edit

The first atmospheric contributions by Metop-A were made by the Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment-2 (GOME-2), a scanning spectrometer on board the satellite. GOME-2, designed by DLR (the German Aerospace Centre) and developed by SELEX Galileo as the successor of ERS-2's GOME (1995), provided coverage of most areas of planet Earth measuring the atmospheric ozone, the distribution of surface ultraviolet radiation, and the amount of nitrogen dioxide (NO2).[12] In addition, sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence, a proxy for gross primary production, can be observed using the GOME-2 instrument.[13][14] The GOME-2 instrument provides a second source of ozone observations that supplement data from the SBUV/2 ozone instruments on the NOAA-18 and NOAA-19 satellites, which are part of the IJPS.[15]

Infrared atmospheric sounding interferometer (IASI) edit

One of the most important instruments carried on board Metop is the Infrared atmospheric sounding interferometer (IASI), the most accurate infrared sounding interferometer currently in orbit. IASI observes the atmosphere in the infra-red (3.7 – 15.5 μm) in 8461 channels, allowing to measure the atmosphere temperature within 1 °C and relative humidity within 10% for each slice of 1 km height. Earth surface is revisited twice a day. IASI by itself produces half of all Metop data.

The Metop constellation edit

Metop-A and Metop-B were launched respectively on 19 October 2006 and 17 September 2012,[16] from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, with Metop-C being launched on 7 November 2018 from the Centre Spatial Guyanais, at Kourou spaceport, Guiana Space Centre.[17]

It was originally planned that subsequent Metop satellites will be launched at approximately five-year intervals, each having a planned operational life of 5 years - as such there would just be one operational satellite at a time. However, based on the good performance of both the Metop-A and Metop-B satellites, EUMETSAT council agreed to extend the EPS programme until at least 2027.[18] Metop-A was operated until 30 November 2021, and similar extensions are projected for Metop-B and Metop-C.

The last Metop-A Out of Plane manoeuvre was performed in August 2016, almost all remaining fuel on board Metop-A was budgeted for end-of-life disposal operations required to put Metop-A in an orbit which will decay and cause re-entry within 25 years in accordance with ISO 24113 Space Debris Mitigation Guidelines.[19] At the end of 2022, the same fuel reserve process was enforced on Metop-B. The vast majority of fuel consumption during the operations phase is needed to compensate for inclination drift and maintain a Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO) with a mean local time of the ascending node (LTAN) of 21:30, and it is estimated that the platform can survive for at least 5 years with a drifting LTAN.[20] These end-of-life disposal operations were initially unplanned, but are deemed necessary after the Iridium-Cosmos collision and Fengyun-1C anti-satellite test have significantly worsened the space debris situation in low Earth orbit (LEO).

Prior to the launch of Metop-C, Metop-A and Metop-B were operated in a co-planar orbit approximately half an orbit apart. With the launch of Metop-C, the three Metop satellites initially share the same orbit separated by approximately a third of an orbit, albeit with Metop-A drifting in LTAN. However, after Summer 2020 Metop-C was relocated to be approximately half an orbit apart from Metop-B, with Metop-A held between the other Metops in preparation for its disposal. Metop-B and Metop-C High Rate Picture Transmission (HRPT) transmits real-time data continuously.

Metop-A had its orbit lowered by performing 23 apogee manoeuvres to almost empty its fuel tanks and is expected to re-enter the Earth's atmosphere within 25 years. Metop-A was decommissioned on 30 November 2021, after which only Metop-B and C remain phased approximately 180 degrees apart. The final Out of Plane manoeuvre was performed on Metop-B in September 2022 meaning that Metop-B is following a similar LTAN drift strategy to Metop-A, but 6 years later. Due to LTAN drift, Metop-B left the reference orbit ground track in October 2023, to ensure phase separation with Metop-C. Metops will be rephased after launch of the first Metop-SG, such that a tandem mission can be performed to cross calibration old and new instruments. After the tandem mission all Metops will be phased such that they are either half or quarter of an orbit apart.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Joo, Sangwon; Eyre, John; Marriott, Richard (October 2013). "The Impact of Metop and Other Satellite Data within the Met Office Global NWP System Using an Adjoint-Based Sensitivity Method". Monthly Weather Review. 141 (10): 3331–3342. Bibcode:2013MWRv..141.3331J. doi:10.1175/mwr-d-12-00232.1. ISSN 0027-0644.
  2. ^ "Plans for Metop-A end of life | EUMETSAT". 13 December 2018.
  3. ^ . EUMETSAT. Archived from the original on 15 October 2017. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
  4. ^ "CEOS EO HANDBOOK – INSTRUMENT INDEX". CEOS, the Committee on Earth Observation Satellites.
  5. ^ ESA fact page
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 March 2007. Retrieved 26 October 2006.
  7. ^ Spaceflight, a publication of the British Interplanetary Society, Volume 49, Number 7, July 2007, page 245, ISSN 0038-6340.
  8. ^ EUMETSAT press release April 24, 2013
  9. ^ "Eumetsat Awards Metop-C Launch to Arianespace - Via Satellite -". 13 September 2010.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 December 2017. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  11. ^ "Plans for Metop-A end of life | EUMETSAT". 13 December 2018.
  12. ^ Spaceflight, a publication of the British Interplanetary Society, Volume 49, Number 5, May 2007, page 166.
  13. ^ Joiner, J.; Guanter, L.; Lindstrot, R.; Voigt, M.; Vasilkov, A. P.; Middleton, E. M.; Huemmrich, K. F.; Yoshida, Y.; Frankenberg, C. (25 October 2013). "Global monitoring of terrestrial chlorophyll fluorescence from moderate-spectral-resolution near-infrared satellite measurements: methodology, simulations, and application to GOME-2". Atmospheric Measurement Techniques. 6 (10): 2803–2823. Bibcode:2013AMT.....6.2803J. doi:10.5194/amt-6-2803-2013. hdl:2060/20140010879.
  14. ^ Koren, Gerbrand; van Schaik, Erik; Araújo, Alessandro C.; Boersma, K. Folkert; Gärtner, Antje; Killaars, Lars; Kooreman, Maurits L.; Kruijt, Bart; van der Laan-Luijkx, Ingrid T.; von Randow, Celso; Smith, Naomi E.; Peters, Wouter (19 November 2018). "Widespread reduction in sun-induced fluorescence from the Amazon during the 2015/2016 El Niño". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 373 (1760): 20170408. doi:10.1098/rstb.2017.0408. PMC 6178432. PMID 30297473.
  15. ^ (PDF). NP-2008-10-056-GSFC. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. 16 December 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 February 2013. Retrieved 8 October 2010.
  16. ^ EUMETSAT MetOp-B Launch Event
  17. ^ . Interfax. 2 July 2018. Archived from the original on 4 July 2018. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 November 2018. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  19. ^ "ISO 24113:2011". ISO. 9 October 2013. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  20. ^ Dyer, Richard; Righetti, Pier Luigi; Vera, Carlos; Vey, Sylvain (25 May 2018). Metop-A Mission Extension: Surviving on a Drifting LTAN. 15th International Conference on Space Operations. Reston, Virginia: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. doi:10.2514/6.2018-2439. ISBN 9781624105623. AIAA 2018-2439.

External links edit

  • EUMETSAT 18 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • European Space Agency
  • Met Office Press Release (archive)

metop, metop, meteorological, operational, satellite, series, three, polar, orbiting, meteorological, satellites, developed, european, space, agency, operated, european, organisation, exploitation, meteorological, satellites, eumetsat, satellites, form, space,. Metop Meteorological Operational satellite is a series of three polar orbiting meteorological satellites developed by the European Space Agency ESA and operated by the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites EUMETSAT The satellites form the space segment component of the overall EUMETSAT Polar System EPS which in turn is the European half of the EUMETSAT NOAA Initial Joint Polar System IJPS The satellites carry a payload comprising 11 scientific instruments and two which support Cospas Sarsat Search and Rescue services In order to provide data continuity between Metop and NOAA Polar Operational Environmental Satellites POES several instruments are carried on both fleets of satellites Metop A launched on 19 October 2006 is Europe s first polar orbiting satellite used for operational meteorology With respect to its primary mission of providing data for Numerical Weather Prediction studies have shown that Metop A data are measured as having the largest impact of any individual satellite platform on reducing 24 hour forecasting errors and accounts for about 25 of the total impact on global forecast error reduction across all data sources 1 Each of the three satellites were originally intended to be operated sequentially however good performance of the Metop A and Metop B satellites mean there was a period of all three satellite operating EUMETSAT lowered the orbit of Metop A and decommissioned the spacecraft in November 2021 2 The successor to the Metop satellites will be MetOp SG currently with the first MetOp SG A satellite expected to be launched in 2025 3 Metop Organization EUMETSAT Mission type Meteorology Climatology Satellite of Earth Metop A Launch 19 October 2006at 16 28 00 UTC Soyuz ST Fregat Baikonur Cosmodrome Metop B Launch 17 September 2012at 16 28 00 UTC Soyuz ST Fregat Baikonur Cosmodrome Metop C Launch 7 November 2018at 00 47 27 UTC Soyuz ST Fregat Guiana Space Centre Dimensions 6 2 x 3 4 x 3 4 metres under the launcher fairing 17 6 x 6 5 x 5 2 metres deployed in orbit Mass 4093 kg Payload Mass 812 kg Webpage 1 Orbital elements Orbit Sun synchronous orbit Inclination 98 7 to the equator Orbital period 101 0 minutes Ground Track Repeat Cycle 29 Days 412 Orbits Mean Altitude 817 km Local Time of Ascending Node 21 30 Metop A International Designator 2006 044A Metop B International Designator 2012 049A Metop C International Designator 2018 087A Contents 1 Instruments 1 1 Shared instruments 1 2 Metop specific instruments 2 Background 2 1 Metop heritage 3 Data acquisition 4 Command and control 5 Mission profile 6 Launch and deployment 7 GOME 2 8 Infrared atmospheric sounding interferometer IASI 9 The Metop constellation 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksInstruments edit nbsp Metop C s payload module being lowered into ESTEC s Large Space Simulator 2017 The following instruments 4 are flown on board the Metop satellites Shared instruments edit The following instruments are shared on the NPOES satellites which form the U S contribution to IJPS AMSU A1 AMSU A2 Advanced Microwave Sounding Units HIRS 4 High resolution Infrared Radiation Sounder N B Not included on Metop C AVHRR 3 Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer Argos A DCS Advanced Data Collection System SEM 2 Space Environment Monitor SARP 3 Search And Rescue Processor N B Not included on Metop C SARR Search And Rescue Repeater N B Not included on Metop C MHS Microwave Humidity Sounder Metop specific instruments edit The following instruments are flown exclusively on the Metop satellites IASI Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer GRAS Global Navigation Satellite System Receiver for Atmospheric Sounding ASCAT Advanced SCATterometer GOME 2 Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment 2Background editMetop has been developed as a joint undertaking between the European Space Agency ESA and European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites EUMETSAT Recognising the growing importance of Numerical Weather Prediction NWP in weather forecasting Metop was designed with a suite of instruments to provide NWP models with high resolution global atmospheric temperature and humidity structure Data from Metop are additionally used for atmospheric chemistry and provision of long term data sets for climate records Metop heritage edit The Metop satellites have a modular construction comprising a Service Module a Payload Module and a suite of instruments A SPOT heritage service module provides power via solar array and five batteries for eclipse attitude and orbit control thermal regulation and Tracking Telemetry and Command TT amp C An Envisat heritage payload module provides common command and control and power buses for the instruments along with science data acquisition and transmission The suite of instruments are largely derived from precursors flown on the European Space Agency s European Remote Sensing Satellite ERS Envisat satellites or are fully recurrent units originally developed for NOAA s Television Infrared Observation Satellite TIROS series of polar orbiting satellites Data acquisition edit nbsp Satellite flare from Metop A May 2019 With the exception of Search and Rescue SARSAT which is a purely local mission with its own dedicated transmitter all data from the MetOp Instruments are formatted and multiplexed by the Payload Module and either stored on a solid state recorder for later transmission via an X Band antenna or directly transmitted to local users via High Rate Picture Transmission HRPT L Band antenna The main Command and Data Acquisition CDA head is located at Svalbard Satellite Station in Norway The high latitude of this station allows the global data stored in the solid state recorder of each satellite to be dumped via X Band once per orbit Each Metop satellite produces approximately 2 GB of raw data per orbit Additionally in order to improve timeliness of products one of the operational satellites dumps the data from the descending part of the orbit over the McMurdo Station in Antarctica Data are then trickle fed from the ground stations to EUMETSAT Headquarters in Darmstadt Germany where they are processed stored and disseminated to various agencies and organisations with a latency of approximately 2 hours without the McMurdo ground station and 1 hour with Svalbard HRPT is used to provide a real time direct readout local mission via a network of receivers on ground provided by cooperating organisations Data from these stations is also transmitted to EUMETSAT and redistributed to provide a regional service with approximately 30 minutes latency Due to radiation sensitivity of the HRPT hardware the Metop A HRPT does not operate over the polar regions or South Atlantic Anomaly Command and control editCommand and Control of Metop is performed from the EPS Control Room at EUMETSAT Headquarters in Darmstadt Germany The control center is connected to the CDA in Svalbard which is used for S Band ranging and doppler measurements for orbit determination acquisition of real time house keeping telemetry and uplink of telecommands The CDA at Svalbard located at approximately 78 North provides TT amp C coverage on each orbit Commands for routine operations are generally uplinked at each CDA contact approximately 36 hours in advance of on board execution Orbit determination can also be performed using data from the GNSS Receiver for Atmospheric Sounding GRAS instrument An independent back up control center is also located at Instituto Nacional de Tecnica Aeroespacial near Madrid Spain Mission profile editThe Metop and NOAA satellites both carry a common set of core instruments In addition Metop carries a set of new European instruments which measure atmospheric temperature and humidity with unprecedented accuracy along with profiles of atmospheric ozone and other trace gases Wind speed and direction over the oceans will also be measured It is expected that these new instruments will herald a significant contribution to the ever growing need for fast and accurate global data to improve numerical weather prediction This in turn will lead to more reliable weather forecasts and in the longer term help with monitoring changing climates more accurately In addition to its meteorological uses it will provide imagery of land and ocean surfaces as well as search and rescue equipment to aid ships and aircraft in distress A data relay system is also on board linking up to buoys and other data collection devices Launch and deployment edit nbsp Ground track of Metop B September 2012 Metop A the first operational European polar orbiting meteorological satellite was successfully launched on 19 October 2006 from Baikonur Cosmodrome Kazakhstan using a Soyuz ST Fregat launch vehicle after six attempts At just over 4000 kg and measuring 17 6 6 5 5 2 metres when in orbit Metop is Europe s second largest Earth observation satellite after Envisat which was launched in 2002 5 The first signal from the satellite was received at 18 35 BST on 20 October 2006 and it was confirmed that the satellite was in its nominally correct orbit with the solar panel deployed Control of the satellite was with the European Space Operations Centre ESOC part of ESA which had the responsibility of achieving the final positioning of the satellite deployment of all the antennas and final reconfiguration of the satellite following necessary orbit control maneuvers The satellite was handed over to EUMETSAT operations on 22 October 2006 The first image was received at 08 00 UTC on 25 October 2006 6 a visible light image of Scandinavia and Eastern Europe but there was a six month period of verification and calibration of the satellite and its instrument payload before it was declared operational Before that point the Met Office received data and started to test and then use it as input to the operational numerical weather prediction runs Metop A was declared fully operational in mid May 2007 and the full data of its 11 scientific instruments are available to its users on operational basis 7 Metop B was declared fully operational and pronounced to replace Metop A as EUMETSAT s prime operational SSO weather satellite in April 2013 8 Metop C was scheduled for launch towards the end of 2016 9 which was postponed until 2017 10 and was launched successfully on 7 November 2018 Due to the longer than expected in orbit performance of Metop A and Metop B all three Metop spacecraft were operated simultaneously until decommissioning of Metop A Metop B and eventually Metop C Metop spacecraft will be succeeded in their operational role by the MetOp Second Generation satellites EUMETSAT began de orbiting Metop A in November 2021 11 GOME 2 editThe first atmospheric contributions by Metop A were made by the Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment 2 GOME 2 a scanning spectrometer on board the satellite GOME 2 designed by DLR the German Aerospace Centre and developed by SELEX Galileo as the successor of ERS 2 s GOME 1995 provided coverage of most areas of planet Earth measuring the atmospheric ozone the distribution of surface ultraviolet radiation and the amount of nitrogen dioxide NO2 12 In addition sun induced chlorophyll fluorescence a proxy for gross primary production can be observed using the GOME 2 instrument 13 14 The GOME 2 instrument provides a second source of ozone observations that supplement data from the SBUV 2 ozone instruments on the NOAA 18 and NOAA 19 satellites which are part of the IJPS 15 Infrared atmospheric sounding interferometer IASI editOne of the most important instruments carried on board Metop is the Infrared atmospheric sounding interferometer IASI the most accurate infrared sounding interferometer currently in orbit IASI observes the atmosphere in the infra red 3 7 15 5 mm in 8461 channels allowing to measure the atmosphere temperature within 1 C and relative humidity within 10 for each slice of 1 km height Earth surface is revisited twice a day IASI by itself produces half of all Metop data The Metop constellation editMetop A and Metop B were launched respectively on 19 October 2006 and 17 September 2012 16 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome with Metop C being launched on 7 November 2018 from the Centre Spatial Guyanais at Kourou spaceport Guiana Space Centre 17 It was originally planned that subsequent Metop satellites will be launched at approximately five year intervals each having a planned operational life of 5 years as such there would just be one operational satellite at a time However based on the good performance of both the Metop A and Metop B satellites EUMETSAT council agreed to extend the EPS programme until at least 2027 18 Metop A was operated until 30 November 2021 and similar extensions are projected for Metop B and Metop C The last Metop A Out of Plane manoeuvre was performed in August 2016 almost all remaining fuel on board Metop A was budgeted for end of life disposal operations required to put Metop A in an orbit which will decay and cause re entry within 25 years in accordance with ISO 24113 Space Debris Mitigation Guidelines 19 At the end of 2022 the same fuel reserve process was enforced on Metop B The vast majority of fuel consumption during the operations phase is needed to compensate for inclination drift and maintain a Sun synchronous orbit SSO with a mean local time of the ascending node LTAN of 21 30 and it is estimated that the platform can survive for at least 5 years with a drifting LTAN 20 These end of life disposal operations were initially unplanned but are deemed necessary after the Iridium Cosmos collision and Fengyun 1C anti satellite test have significantly worsened the space debris situation in low Earth orbit LEO Prior to the launch of Metop C Metop A and Metop B were operated in a co planar orbit approximately half an orbit apart With the launch of Metop C the three Metop satellites initially share the same orbit separated by approximately a third of an orbit albeit with Metop A drifting in LTAN However after Summer 2020 Metop C was relocated to be approximately half an orbit apart from Metop B with Metop A held between the other Metops in preparation for its disposal Metop B and Metop C High Rate Picture Transmission HRPT transmits real time data continuously Metop A had its orbit lowered by performing 23 apogee manoeuvres to almost empty its fuel tanks and is expected to re enter the Earth s atmosphere within 25 years Metop A was decommissioned on 30 November 2021 after which only Metop B and C remain phased approximately 180 degrees apart The final Out of Plane manoeuvre was performed on Metop B in September 2022 meaning that Metop B is following a similar LTAN drift strategy to Metop A but 6 years later Due to LTAN drift Metop B left the reference orbit ground track in October 2023 to ensure phase separation with Metop C Metops will be rephased after launch of the first Metop SG such that a tandem mission can be performed to cross calibration old and new instruments After the tandem mission all Metops will be phased such that they are either half or quarter of an orbit apart See also edit nbsp Spaceflight portal Satellite flare MetOp Second GenerationReferences edit Joo Sangwon Eyre John Marriott Richard October 2013 The Impact of Metop and Other Satellite Data within the Met Office Global NWP System Using an Adjoint Based Sensitivity Method Monthly Weather Review 141 10 3331 3342 Bibcode 2013MWRv 141 3331J doi 10 1175 mwr d 12 00232 1 ISSN 0027 0644 Plans for Metop A end of life EUMETSAT 13 December 2018 EUMETSAT Polar System Second Generation EUMETSAT Archived from the original on 15 October 2017 Retrieved 11 January 2020 CEOS EO HANDBOOK INSTRUMENT INDEX CEOS the Committee on Earth Observation Satellites ESA fact page First Satellite Image received by Dundee University Satellite receiving station Archived from the original on 19 March 2007 Retrieved 26 October 2006 Spaceflight a publication of the British Interplanetary Society Volume 49 Number 7 July 2007 page 245 ISSN 0038 6340 EUMETSAT press release April 24 2013 Eumetsat Awards Metop C Launch to Arianespace Via Satellite 13 September 2010 EUMETSAT news item 24 April 2013 Archived from the original on 22 December 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2013 Plans for Metop A end of life EUMETSAT 13 December 2018 Spaceflight a publication of the British Interplanetary Society Volume 49 Number 5 May 2007 page 166 Joiner J Guanter L Lindstrot R Voigt M Vasilkov A P Middleton E M Huemmrich K F Yoshida Y Frankenberg C 25 October 2013 Global monitoring of terrestrial chlorophyll fluorescence from moderate spectral resolution near infrared satellite measurements methodology simulations and application to GOME 2 Atmospheric Measurement Techniques 6 10 2803 2823 Bibcode 2013AMT 6 2803J doi 10 5194 amt 6 2803 2013 hdl 2060 20140010879 Koren Gerbrand van Schaik Erik Araujo Alessandro C Boersma K Folkert Gartner Antje Killaars Lars Kooreman Maurits L Kruijt Bart van der Laan Luijkx Ingrid T von Randow Celso Smith Naomi E Peters Wouter 19 November 2018 Widespread reduction in sun induced fluorescence from the Amazon during the 2015 2016 El Nino Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 373 1760 20170408 doi 10 1098 rstb 2017 0408 PMC 6178432 PMID 30297473 NOAA N Prime PDF NP 2008 10 056 GSFC NASA Goddard Space Flight Center 16 December 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 16 February 2013 Retrieved 8 October 2010 EUMETSAT MetOp B Launch Event Launch of Soyuz ST with European satellite from Kourou spaceport delayed until November 6 Interfax 2 July 2018 Archived from the original on 4 July 2018 Retrieved 4 July 2018 EUMETSAT Annual Report 2017 Archived from the original on 8 November 2018 Retrieved 7 November 2018 ISO 24113 2011 ISO 9 October 2013 Retrieved 7 November 2018 Dyer Richard Righetti Pier Luigi Vera Carlos Vey Sylvain 25 May 2018 Metop A Mission Extension Surviving on a Drifting LTAN 15th International Conference on Space Operations Reston Virginia American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics doi 10 2514 6 2018 2439 ISBN 9781624105623 AIAA 2018 2439 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to EUMETSAT EUMETSAT Archived 18 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine European Space Agency EUMETSAT Met Office Press Release archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title MetOp amp oldid 1224106207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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