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(New page: The Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) is one of the ten instruments onboard the Envisat satellite launched on the 28th of February 2002 from Kourou (French Guyana) and operate...)
 
 
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The Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) is one of the ten instruments onboard the Envisat satellite launched on the 28th of February 2002 from Kourou (French Guyana) and operated by the European Space Agency (ESA). MERIS is a 68.5-degree field-of-view nadir-pointing imaging spectrometer which measures the solar radiation reflected by the Earth in 15 spectral bands (visible and near-infrared). It obtains a global coverage of the Earth in 3 days. Its main objective is to measure the sea colour and quantify the ocean chlorophyll content and sediment, thus providing information on the ocean carbon cycle and thermal regime. It is also used to derive the cloud top height, cloud optical thickness, aerosol and water vapour column. The ground spatial resolution of the instrument is 260 m x 290 m.  
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Definition|title=MERIS
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|definition= The Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) is one of the ten instruments onboard the Envisat satellite and operated by the European Space Agency (ESA). MERIS is an imaging spectrometer which measures the solar radiation reflected by the Earth in 15 spectral bands (visible and near-infrared). It obtains a global coverage of the Earth in 3 days. Its main objective is to measure the sea colour and quantify the ocean chlorophyll content and sediment, thus providing information on the ocean carbon cycle and thermal regime. It is also used to derive the cloud top height, cloud optical thickness, aerosol and water vapour column.  
  
ESA produces MERIS datasets in full resolution (FR) 1 pixel = 260 m x 290 m or reduced resolution (RR) 1 pixel = 1,040 m x 1,160 m and on two processing levels, namely L1b (radiances) and L2 (retrieved products).
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The ground spatial resolution of the instrument is 260 m x 290 m. ESA produces MERIS datasets in full resolution (FR): 1 pixel = 260 m x 290 m or reduced resolution (RR)1 pixel = 1,040 m x 1,160 m.
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==See also==
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* [[Optical remote sensing]]
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==References==
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* [http://envisat.esa.int/handbooks/meris/CNTR.htm MERIS product handbook and User Guide]
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* [http://earth.esa.int/earthimages/ ESA / MERIS Earth images]

Huidige versie van 3 apr 2008 om 17:45

Definition of MERIS:
The Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) is one of the ten instruments onboard the Envisat satellite and operated by the European Space Agency (ESA). MERIS is an imaging spectrometer which measures the solar radiation reflected by the Earth in 15 spectral bands (visible and near-infrared). It obtains a global coverage of the Earth in 3 days. Its main objective is to measure the sea colour and quantify the ocean chlorophyll content and sediment, thus providing information on the ocean carbon cycle and thermal regime. It is also used to derive the cloud top height, cloud optical thickness, aerosol and water vapour column.


The ground spatial resolution of the instrument is 260 m x 290 m. ESA produces MERIS datasets in full resolution (FR): 1 pixel = 260 m x 290 m or reduced resolution (RR): 1 pixel = 1,040 m x 1,160 m.
This is the common definition for MERIS, other definitions can be discussed in the article

See also

References