Sentinel-3
Sentinel-3 is an Earth observation satellite constellation developed by the European Space Agency as part of the Copernicus Programme. It currently consists of 2 satellites: Sentinel-3A and Sentinel-3B. Two more satellites, Sentinel-3C and Sentinel-3D, are on order.
Copernicus, formerly Global Monitoring for Environment and Security, is the European programme to establish a European capacity for Earth observation designed to provide European policy makers and public authorities with accurate and timely information to better manage the environment, and to understand and mitigate the effects of climate change.
Overview
On 14 April 2008, the European Space Agency and Thales Alenia Space signed a contract to build the first GMES Sentinel-3 in its Cannes Mandelieu Space Center. Bruno Berruti led the team that was responsible for delivering the Copernicus Sentinel-3 satellites from the drawing board into orbit. The satellite platform was delivered to France for final integration in 2013. The communications systems were completed by Thales Alenia Space España in early 2014.Sentinel-3A was subsequently launched on 16 February 2016 on a Rokot vehicle from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome, located near Arkhangelsk, Russia. This first launch was followed by the launch of Sentinel-3B on 25 April 2018, also aboard a Rokot.
The Sentinel-3 mission's main objective is to measure sea-surface topography, sea- and land-surface temperature and ocean- and land-surface colour with accuracy in support of ocean forecasting systems, and for environmental and climate monitoring. Sentinel-3 builds directly on the heritage pioneered by ERS-2 and Envisat satellites. Near-real time data will be provided for ocean forecasting, sea-ice charting, and maritime safety services on the state of the ocean surface, including surface temperature, marine ecosystems, water quality and pollution monitoring.
A pair of Sentinel-3 satellites will enable a short revisit time of less than two days for the OLCI instrument and less than one day for SLSTR at the equator. This will be achieved using both Sentinel-3A and Sentinel-3B satellites in conjunction. The satellite orbit provides a 27-day repeat for the topography package, with a 4-day sub-cycle.
Objectives
Mission objectives are:- Measure sea-surface topography, sea-surface height and significant wave height
- Measure ocean and land-surface temperature
- Measure ocean and land-surface colour
- Monitor sea and land ice topography
- Sea-water quality and pollution monitoring
- Inland water monitoring, including rivers and lakes
- Aid marine weather forecasting with acquired data
- Climate monitoring and modelling
- Land-use change monitoring
- Forest cover mapping
- Fire detection
- Weather forecasting
- Measuring Earth's thermal radiation for atmospheric applications
Mission characteristics
- Role: Earth observation satellite
- Launch mass: Appx.
- Orbit: Sun-synchronous
- Altitude:
- Inclination: 98.6°
- Local time of Descending Node: 10:00 a.m.
- Orbit cycle: ~100 minutes
- Nominal duration: 7.5 years
Instruments
- SLSTR will determine global sea-surface temperatures to an accuracy of better than. It measures in nine spectral channels and two additional bands optimised for fire monitoring. The first six spectral bands cover the visible and near-infrared spectrum as well as the short-wave infrared spectrum; VNIR for bands 1 to 3, and SWIR for bands 4 to 6. These 6 bands have a spatial resolution of, while bands 7 to 9 as well as the two additional bands have a spatial resolution of. For the SLSTR instrument on the Sentinel 3, calibration on-board is one of the most detrimental objectives for the thermal and infrared channels. This instrument has two black bodies that were targeted, one at lower temperature than predicted, and one at a higher temperature. Therefore, the range in between the high and low temperatures of these black bodies measures the ocean surface temperature.
- OLCI is a medium-resolution imaging spectrometer that uses five cameras to provide a wide field of view. The OLCI is an along-track or "push broom" scanner, meaning that the sensor array is arranged perpendicular to the path of flight. This method essentially eliminates the scale distortion near the edge of an image that is common with across-track or "whisk broom" scanners. OLCI has 21 spectral bands with wavelengths ranging from the optical to the near-infrared. Bands vary in width from 400 nm to 1020 nm, and serve a variety of different purposes, including measuring water vapour absorption, aerosol levels, and chlorophyll absorption. SLSTR and OLCI are optical instruments with an overlap of their swath path, allowing for new combined applications. Due to climate changing factors, inland coastal regions have become an increased area of concern and from 2002 to 2012, the Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer provided quality observations for analysis. The OLCI improves upon the MERIS in that it was built with six additional spectral bands, higher-end signal to noise ratio, reduced solar glaring, a maximum of 300 m spatial resolution, and increased ground coverage allowing it to sense cyanobacterial levels within inland coastal ecosystems. This is currently the only sensor in space able to detect cyanobacteria.
- SRAL is the main topographic instrument to provide accurate topography measurements over sea ice, ice sheets, rivers and lakes. It uses dual-frequency Ku and C band and is supported by a microwave radiometer for atmospheric correction and a DORIS receiver for orbit positioning. This allows the instrument, which is based on legacy missions such as CryoSat and the Jason missions, to provide a 300 meter resolution and a total range error of 3 cm. The instrument operates its pulse repetition frequency at 1.9KHz and 17.8 KHZ.
- DORIS is a receiver for orbit positioning.
- MWR will measure water vapour and cloud water content and the thermal radiation emitted by the Earth. The MWR sensor has a radiometric accuracy of.
- LRR will be used to accurately locate the satellite in orbit using a laser ranging system. When used in combination with SRAL, DORIS, MWR, they will acquire detailed topographic measurements of the ocean and in-land water.
- GNSS will provide precise orbit determination and can track multiple satellites simultaneously.
Satellite operation and data flow
Applications
The applications of Sentinel-3 are diverse. Using the collection of sensors on-board Sentinel-3 is able to detect ocean and land temperature and colour change. The Ocean and Land Color Instrument has a resolution with 21 distinct bands allowing global coverage in less than four days. This sensor can then be used to by researches to do water quality and land-monitoring research. The satellite also has the ability to monitor the temperature of the sea, land and ice through the Sea and Land Surface Temperature Radiometer. Sentinel-3 also had the ability to detect changes in sea-surface height and sea-ice using the synthetic aperture radar altimeter and the microwave radiometer, two of the most complex sensors on the satellite.The observations acquired by the mission will be used to in conjunction with other ocean-observing missions to contribute to the Global Ocean Observing System which aims to create a permanent system of ocean observation.
- Ocean colour and land reflectance data
- Sea, land and ice surface temperature
- Active fire and burnt area monitoring
- Sea surface topography data
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