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199 points diggan | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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perihelions ◴[] No.44473039[source]
> "MTG-S1’s Infrared Sounder will scan nearly 2,000 thermal infrared wavelengths every 30 minutes to build vertical profiles of temperature, humidity, and trace gases. These data will be crucial for detecting fast-developing convective weather by revealing sudden shifts in instability, moisture, or wind – even before clouds begin to form."

In other words, it is

> "The Infrared Sounder on MTG-S1 is the first hyperspectral sounding instrument in geostationary orbit."

https://www.esa.int/Applications/Observing_the_Earth/Meteoro...

Is there a more technical article describing this hyperspectral instrument somewhere? It sounds pretty novel.

edit: Also, I'm now confused about the ESA's claim to be "the first", because

> "In 2016, the Chinese Meteorological Agency (CMA) launched the Geostationary Interferometric Infrared Sounder (GIIRS), to be the first hyperspectral sounder in geostationary orbit"

https://www.aos.wisc.edu/aosjournal/Volume38/Loveless_PhD.pd... (PhD thesis of David M. Loveless (2021))

replies(4): >>44473145 #>>44473146 #>>44473175 #>>44473297 #
1. riedel ◴[] No.44473175[source]
Here is a link that lists the sensors/data products roughly: https://webapps.itc.utwente.nl/sensor/getsat.aspx?Find=sat&N...

The IRS seems 4km and sentinel 4 8km if I read it correctly. The cool thing is that it is stationary unlike other sentinel satellites and can actually be used for now casting. No clue how infrared sounding performs with cloud cover.