♫musicjinni

European weather October 2013

video thumbnail
A movie of weather over Europe during October 2013, with audio commentary from Mark Higgins, Educator and Trainer at EUMETSAT.

The 'Natural Colour RGB' images used in the movie are taken from EUMETSAT's Meteosat-10 satellite in geostationary orbit 36,000 km above the Earth. The Natural Colour RGB product makes use of three solar channels: VIS0.6, VIS0.8 and NIR1.6. In this colour scheme vegetation appears greenish because of its large reflectance in the VIS0.8 channel (the green beam) compared to the NIR1.6 (red beam) and VIS0.6 (blue beam) channels.

Water clouds with small droplets have large reflectance at all three channels and hence appear whitish, while snow and ice clouds appears cyan because ice strongly absorbs in NIR1.6 (no red).

Bare ground appears brown because of the larger reflectance in the NIR1.6 than at VIS0.6, and the ocean appears black because of the low reflectance in all three channels.

See the full view of the Earth, as seen by Meteosat-10, here:
http://oiswww.eumetsat.org/IPPS/html/MSG/RGB/NATURALCOLOR/index.htm

A Year of Weather - 2019

A year of weather 2022

Welcome to EUMETSAT 🛰️

Meteosat Instrumentation

Meteorology via satellite

Metop Second Generation A: METImage animation

Goodbye, Metop A

Use of Metop/EPS Programme data

EUMETSAT overview

Using Meteosat Third Generation data - Florence Rabier

Monitoring weather and climate from space

Satellites and storms

Meteosat Third Generation explained

Frozen Europe

EUMETSAT and Africa: an overview

Using Meteosat Third Generation data - Phil Evans

EUMETSAT Ground System

European weather June 2012

European weather July 2012

Using Meteosat Third Generation data – interview with FMI

European weather May 2012

A year of weather 2023

A Year of Weather 2020

European weather April 2012

EUMETSAT - Monitoring weather and climate from space

EUMETSAT’s future focus – a new era approaches

Meteosat Third Generation in Africa - Webinar

European weather October 2013

European weather September 2012

Using Meteosat Third Generation data – interview with TSMS

Disclaimer DMCA