Title: GOESPOES Status, Orbits, and Products
1GOES/POES Status, Orbits, and Products
- Dr. Bernie Connell
- CIRA/NOAA-RAMMT
- March 2005
2Outline
- GOES vs. POES
- GOES Satellite and Sensors
- Orbit
- Image Scheduling
- Channels and Products (Imager and Sounder)
- POES
- Orbit
- Image Availability
- Channels and Products
3Why do you need to know this?
- Let you know what resources are available
currently or what resources will be available in
the future - Help you understand key features of the various
satellites. - Define periods when you expect to view images.
- Define what is happening when you do not see
images.
4GOES vs. POES
850 km
- Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite
geo-synchronous orbit 35,800 km above the
earth - Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental
Satellite sun-synchronous orbit 850 km above the
earth
35,800 km
5The GOES and POES Systems
- Environmental Sensing
- Acquisition, Processing, and Dissemination of
imaging and sounding data. - Space environment monitor
- Data Collection
- Interrogate and receive data from earth
surface-based Data Collection Platforms - Data Broadcast
- Continuous relay of weather facsimile and other
meteorological data to small users - Relay of distress signals from aircraft or marine
vessels to the search and rescue ground station
GOES I-M DataBook, NOAA KLM Users Guide
6Characteristics of GOES
- Observes events and their evolution
- Repeat coverage in minutes (t 15 or 30 minutes
(or less)) - Full earth disk
- Restricted viewing of high-latitudes due to large
viewing angles excellent viewing of the tropics - Same viewing angle for fixed point
- Differing solar illumination for fixed point
throughout the day - Resolution visible 1 km , infrared 4 km
- sounder 10 km
- Constant hourly viewing helps get clear field of
view for sounding - Passive sensors
Satellite Meteorology Remote Sensing Using the
New GOES Imager
7Characteristics of POES
- Observes events at fixed and infrequent times
- Repeat coverage twice daily (t 12 hours)
- Global coverage
- Excellent viewing of all latitudes
- Varying viewing angle
- Same solar illumination
- Resolution visible 1 km, infrared 1 km
- sounders microwave 10-50 km, infrared - 20
km - Microwave helps with atmospheric and surface
detection in the presence of clouds - Passive and Active sensors
Satellite Meteorology Remote Sensing Using the
New GOES Imager
8Image Resolution
- The design of the sensor and resulting image
resolution is determined by many factors - Detail in the horizontal (imagers)
- Detail in the vertical (sounders)
- Satellite distance from earth (36,000 km vs. 850
km) - Resolving power of the lens and the wavelength of
radiation. - Size of sensor (cost)
9Active vs. Passive Sensors
- A passive sensor measures energy emitted by
another source. - An active sensor, such as a weather radar,
measures the return signal from a pulse of energy
emitted by the sensor itself.
10Multispectral vs. Hyperspectral
- Multispectral sensors sensors that collect
imagery for a small number of broad wavelength
bands - Hyperspectral sensors sensors that collect
imagery for a large number (hundreds) of narrow
contiguous wavelength bands.
11The GOES Spacecraft
GOES-8 Spacecraft
GOES I-M DataBook
12Area Scan
Imager
(For GOES 8 11) GOES-12 has a wider spectral
band for the water vapor channel and the 12.0 um
channel has been replaced with a 13.3 um channel.
GOES I-M DataBook
13GOES Imager Channels
- GOES Wavelength Central Number of
Detector - Channel (µm) Wavelength
Detectors Resolution - (µm) (per scan) (km)
- __________________________________________________
_______ - 1 0.52-0.72 0.7 8
1 Visible - 2 3.78-4.03 3.9 2 4
Shortwave IR - 3 6.47-7.02 6.7 1
8 - 3 G12 5.77-7.33 6.5
2 4 - 4 10.2-11.2 10.7 2 4
- 5 11.5-12.5 12.0 2 4
- 6 G12 12.9-13.7 13.3
1 8
Longwave IR
14GOES Sounder Channels
Midwave
Longwave
Shortwave
Midwave
Resolution 10 km
Satellite Meteorology Using the GOES Sounder
15GOES
GOES I-M DataBook
16GOES-EAST ROUTINE IMAGER SCHEDULE SECTORS
- SECTOR
DURATION -
MINSSECS - CONUS
448 - N. HEMIS. EXT
1413 - S. HEMIS.
448 - FULL DISK
2605
17GOES-EAST RAPID SCAN IMAGER SCHEDULE SECTORS
- SECTOR DURATION
-
MINSSECS - CONUS
443 - N. HEMISPHERE 944
S. HEMIS. S. S.
145 - FULL DISK
2605
18GOES-EAST SUPER RAPID SCAN IMAGER SCHEDULE
SECTORS
- SECTOR
DURATION -
MINSSECS - CONUS
443 - N. HEMISPHERE
944 - SRSO (Maryland)
102 - FULL DISK
2605
19GOES-EAST SOUNDER SCAN SCHEDULES
- SECTOR
DURATION -
MINSSECS - CONUS
3000 - E. CARIBBEAN
2200 - GULF OF MEXICO
2200 - N. ATLANTIC
2200
20GOES Imager Products
High density winds
Heavy Rainfall
Fog/low cloud
Inflight Icing
Volcanic ash detection
Fire detection
21GOES Sounder Products
Lifted Index
CAPE
Convective Inhibition
Total Precipitable Water
Surface Skin Temperature
Water vapor winds
22 POES
- Main Operational POES
- NOAA
- DMSP
- Semi-operational POES
- QuikSCAT
- Terra and Aqua (contain MODIS imager)
23NOAA KLM System
- Sensors of interest
- Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer/3
(AVHRR/3) - Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit A (AMSU A)
- Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit B (AMSU B)
- High Resolution Infrared Radiation Sounder
(HIRS/3)
24Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP)
- Sensors of interest
- Special Sensor Microwave / Imager (SSM/I)
- Special Sensor Microwave / Temperature (SSM/T)
Atmospheric Temperature Profiler - SSM/T2 Atmospheric Water Vapor Profiler
http//dmsp.ngdc.noaa.gov/dmsp.html
25Cross-track Scanning (AVHRR, AMSU, MODIS)
Polar Satellite Products for the Operational
Forecaster COMET CD Module
26Conical Scanning SSM/I
Polar Satellite Products for the Operational
Forecaster COMET CD
27Orbital Coverage
- Satellite makes one orbit (360) in about 100
min i.e., it goes about 3.6/min, or about 10
in 3 minutes. - With a knowledge of which way the satellite is
moving and how fast it is moving, one can
estimate viewing time at a particular point.
Introduction to POES data and products
COMET/VISIT teletraining
28AMSU coverage (2200 km swath)
http//amsu.cira.colostate.edu/
29SSMI coverage (1400 km swath)
swath
Example from NOAAs Marine Observing Systems Team
Web Page http//manati.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/doc/s
smiwinds.html
30AVHRR/3 (3000 km swath)
http//www.ngdc.noaa.gov/seg/globsys/avhrr4.shtml
31AVHRR Products
SST
- Sea Surface Temperature (SST)
- Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI)
- Atmospheric aerosols
- Volcanic Ash detection
- Fire detection
NDVI
Aerosols
Fires
Volcanic Ash
32AMSU-A AMSU-B
Notation xyz x is the center frequency. If y
appears, the center frequency is not sensed, but
two bands, one on either side of the center
frequency, are sensed y is the distance from
the center frequency to the center of the two
pass bands. If z appears, it is the width of the
two pass bands. Polarization R rotates with
scan angle.
Source Kidder and Vonder Haar (1995)
33SSM/I Microwave Imager
Polarization V vertical, H horizontal
Source Kidder and Vonder Haar (1995) POES
Microwave Applications CD - COMET
34Polar Satellite Products for the Operational
Forecaster COMET CD
35AMSU/SSMI Products
TPW
- Total Precipitable Water (TPW)
- Cloud Liquid Water (CLW)
- Rain rate
- Snow and Ice cover
CLW
Ice cover
Rain rate
Snow cover
http//amsu.cira.colostate.edu/
36QuikSCAT
- Orbit Sun-synchronous, 803 km, 98.6 inclination
orbit - Seawinds Instrument Microwave Radar (active
sensor) - 13.4 GHz
- Retrieval of near surface wind speed and
direction - Resolution on ground 25 km
- 1800 km wide swath
NASA/JPL web pages http//winds.jpl.nasa.gov/abou
tScat/index.cfm
37Example from NOAAs Marine Observing Systems Team
Web Page http//manati.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/quiks
cat/
38Example from NOAAs Marine Observing Systems Team
Web Page http//manati.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/quiks
cat/
39MODISModerate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer
- 36 spectral bands
- 2330 km swath width
- 55 view angle
- Resolution on ground at nadir
- 1 km for all channels
- 250 m for bands 1 and 2 (0.645 and 0.865 um)
- 500 m for bands 3 7 (0.470, 0.555, 1.240,
1.640, 2.130 um)
40(No Transcript)
41MODIS Aqua coverage (2330 km swath)
Space Science and Engineering Center
(SSEC) http//www.ssec.wisc.edu/datacenter/aqua/
42MODIS Products
Cloud fraction (daytime)
Surface albedo
Clear sky precipitable water (IR)
Normalized difference vegetation index
Cloud optical thickness (water)
Ecosystem classification
Aerosol optical depth
AND MANY MORE http//modis-atmos.gsfc.nasa.gov/i
ndex.html
43Summary of swath widths for select POES
44References
- CDs produced by the COMET program (see
meted.ucar.edu) - Polar Satellite Products for the Operational
Forecaster - POES Introduction and Background
- POES Microwave Applications
- An Introduction to POES Data and Products
- Satellite Meteorology Remote Sensing Using the
New GOES Imager - Satellite Meteorology Using the GOES Sounder
- Space Systems Loral, 1996 GOES I-M DataBook
- Can be found online at http//rsd.gsfc.nasa.gov/
goes/text/goes.databook.html - NOAA KLM Users Guide http//www2.ncdc.noaa.gov/d
ocs/klm/index.htm - NOAA/NESDIS Office of Satellite Operations
http//www.oso.noaa.gov/goes/index.htm - NOAA/NESDIS Office of Satellite Data Processing
and Distribution http//www.osdpd.noaa.gov/ - Hastings, D. and W. Emery. 1992. The Advanced
Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) a brief
reference guide. Photogrammetric Engineering
Remote Sensing 58(8)1183-1188.