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Satnews Daily
October 27th, 2016

How Serendipitous For EUMETSAT


Thought lost forever, but now found, are 40-year-old satellite images that will significantly add to the understanding of the Earth's climate.

The data, from the European Space Agency’s (ESA) prototype Meteosat-1 geostationary meteorological satellite, was found at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Space Science and Engineering Center (SSEC) in the United States. The imagery has now been provided to EUMETSAT, which operates and disseminates data from Meteosat-1’s “descendants” and, crucially, has an uninterrupted record of climate data from these satellites stretching back more than 30 years. That record, although with a small gap, now extends even further back in time. To say that the discovery of this lost data was greeted with enthusiasm would be an understatement, with climate scientists describing it as “like finding a lost child”— “the first born”!

Meteosat-1 was launched on November 23, 1977, and was positioned in a geostationary orbit at 0 degrees longitude, with a constant view of most of Europe, all of Africa, the Middle East and portions of South America. From that position, this view of the “full-disk” was scanned every 30 minutes, with the data being provided in near-real time to users. The satellite’s mission lasted until November 25 , 1979.

At the time of Meteosat-1's on orbit present, such represented cutting-edge technology and introduced the concept of a global system of geostationary platforms capable of observing the atmospheric circulation and weather around the equator in near-real time. This was also the first geostationary meteorological satellite to have a water vapor channel, tracking the motion of moisture in the air. 

The data found in the US comprises 20,790 images, from December 1, 1978, to November 24, 1979.

On June 27, 2016, EUMETSAT held an event to celebrate the organization's 30th anniversary, in Darmstadt, Germany. Among the guests was Dr. Paul Menzel, Senior Scientist with the Cooperative Institute for Meteorological Satellite Studies, part of the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Space Science and Engineering Center. A memento received by guests at that event was a memory stick with links to EUMETSAT’s climate data record, from January 1, 1984, up until this anniversary in 2016—that's more than 32 years.

It was pointed out that the data was all there, except for two days, which were missing,” Dr Menzel said. “That prompted me to have a look whether we had the data for those two days. When I went back, we started looking for the data but I was told we didn’t have any Meteosat data from before 1992. I knew that couldn’t be right.”

The SSEC Data Center didn’t have the data for the missing two days but did find something even more valuable. In 1978 to 1979, the First GARP (Global Atmospheric Research Program) Global Experiment (FGGE) was undertaken, a project reported by New Scientist at the time as the biggest cooperative international venture ever undertaken. The project was to find out which gaps in global weather monitoring could be filled to improve weather forecasting seven to 10 days in advance.

Meteosat-1 data was provided to the SSEC for this project. The center’s founder, Verner Suomi, often referred to as the “Father of Satellite Meteorology,” had the foresight to recognize the importance of preserving Earth Observation (EO) data.

I thought we must have the FGGE data,” Dr. Menzel said. “Vern’s mentality was, I don’t want to lose any of the data.”

Dr. Menzel’s colleague, CIMSS Program Manager Dr. David Santek said teams of experts had worked in three shifts around the clock tracking cloud features in the images from the 1,200 nine-track tapes of Meteosat-1 data that was shipped to them for the FGGE project in 1978-79.

Then those tapes sat around for 20 years,” Dr. Santek said. “In 1997, we started converting data from old tape media on to more modern media. We could not dispose of those old tapes. From 2001-2004, new nine-track tape drives were acquired to extract most of the data from the tapes and, over the past 15 years, the original data were stored on disk, although without any attempt to use it.

That’s why the old data were able to be found.

However, finding the data was not the end of the story. The files were stored on disk in the original tape format and needed to be decoded. 

Dan Forrest, SSEC’s Senior Systems Engineer, spent several weeks piecing the files together, dug up old documentation, wrote a decoder and was able to retrieve the data, but it was not quite usable. In another serendipitous twist, D.r Santek was the person who wrote some of the original code and he provided modules for navigating and calibrating the data.

The data from Meteosat-1 will help scientists better understand the climate and how it has changed. EUMETSAT Climate Services and Product Manager Dr Jörg Schulz said the discovery would not only provide a longer time series of climate data but would be reanalyzed and reprocessed using the latest methodology.

[This data] gives us information about the state of the Earth’s atmosphere from a time when there was less interference from human activity,” Dr. Menzel added.

Dr. Schulz added this find would help further improve understanding of the Earth’s climate system. “One of the grand challenges in climate science is to better understand atmospheric circulation in general,” Dr Schulz said. “Where is the tropical, warm, moist air going? Where is the polar, cool, dry air going? And how does this change over time? This data will be very important to support the analysis of position, strength and variability of storm tracks as well as circulation-cloud interactions.”

The three scientists were keen to stress the scientific and historical importance of the data as well as how this demonstrates the value of strong collaboration and cooperation.

It’s another example of the strong collaboration between SSEC and EUMETSAT and I’m very happy to have found those tapes,” Dr. Menzel said.

A lot of people were involved,” Dr. Santek added. “It’s history and we are able to make it useful, even though it hasn’t been looked at for 30 years.”

“We are excited about the work done at SSEC and look forward to analyzing and improving the data in collaboration with SSEC in the coming years,” Dr. Schulz concluded.

www.eumetsat.int