I have zero background in this area, just following the rabbit hole -- there seems to be open access to ESA's Sentinel missions: https://scihub.copernicus.eu/
The Sentinel data is excellent, and spans several satellite platforms and a huge number of modalities. In some significant cases (surface deformation, imaging spectroscopy, for example) Sentinel surpasses (current!) NASA data. (I use both in various projects.)
In general there are a lot of trades, including ground sampling distance, temporal revisits, and spectral coverage. So it’s good to have options.
Both NASA and ESA do exceptionally well at offering free data for science purposes. All the NASA science data, Earth and otherwise, is free.
People think of this data as a camera that’s pointed at a target, but that’s not how it works now. There are calibration and inversions that have be done to transform the observed electromagnetic data into physically-relevant quantities.
I’m not a commercial user, but it is possible that there are charges for some commercial purposes, or for niche applications that require high volumes or low latency. (Although many missions offer near real time feeds for free as well as slower calibrated feeds.) The data egress costs are a concern for NASA Earth science…I don’t remember the specific numbers but they have been increasing rapidly.
Hey, thanks for this link, it looks interesting but I’ll have to find out what kinds of measurements they provide. The User Guide seems to have a complete list:
There are several interesting things there, like CH₄, SO₂, etc.
They also include data derived from “Suomi-NPP VIIRS Clouds” which is the NOAA instrument used by the Gas Flare Tracker, matched to the ESA data.
It would be great news if they changed their policies in these years.
(A couple of minutes later, checking while writing this comment...)
Oh... “Please login to access our services...” Ok, I might take a look at it later.
Thanks anyway for the link, I might have seen a previous version of this page but I don’t remember seeing the detailed product (measurements) list. It does look more promising that it used to.
Meanwhile in USA: “The VIIRS Nightfire (VNF) digital data access will be transitioned to restricted access for organizations that have approved data user license agreements with EOG. Commercial users can also be approved, but will be expected to make annual payments to cover a portion of the VNF program costs.”
https://eogdata.mines.edu/products/vnf/
The ESA is just as open as nasa, and the freely available Copernicus images benefit US citizens as well. This pissing contest that you try to start is ridiculous. Americans and Europeans are very happy with each other in this regard.
mturmon|3 years ago
In general there are a lot of trades, including ground sampling distance, temporal revisits, and spectral coverage. So it’s good to have options.
Both NASA and ESA do exceptionally well at offering free data for science purposes. All the NASA science data, Earth and otherwise, is free.
People think of this data as a camera that’s pointed at a target, but that’s not how it works now. There are calibration and inversions that have be done to transform the observed electromagnetic data into physically-relevant quantities.
I’m not a commercial user, but it is possible that there are charges for some commercial purposes, or for niche applications that require high volumes or low latency. (Although many missions offer near real time feeds for free as well as slower calibrated feeds.) The data egress costs are a concern for NASA Earth science…I don’t remember the specific numbers but they have been increasing rapidly.
the_only_law|3 years ago
AlbertoGP|3 years ago
https://scihub.copernicus.eu/userguide/
Then they have more details in their Technical Guides, for instance this one for Sentinel-5P: https://sentinels.copernicus.eu/web/sentinel/technical-guide...
There are several interesting things there, like CH₄, SO₂, etc. They also include data derived from “Suomi-NPP VIIRS Clouds” which is the NOAA instrument used by the Gas Flare Tracker, matched to the ESA data.
Here is the Sentinel-3 OLCI Technical Guide: https://sentinels.copernicus.eu/web/sentinel/technical-guide...
It would be great news if they changed their policies in these years.
(A couple of minutes later, checking while writing this comment...) Oh... “Please login to access our services...” Ok, I might take a look at it later.
Thanks anyway for the link, I might have seen a previous version of this page but I don’t remember seeing the detailed product (measurements) list. It does look more promising that it used to.
Meanwhile in USA: “The VIIRS Nightfire (VNF) digital data access will be transitioned to restricted access for organizations that have approved data user license agreements with EOG. Commercial users can also be approved, but will be expected to make annual payments to cover a portion of the VNF program costs.” https://eogdata.mines.edu/products/vnf/
enriquto|3 years ago