The SEVIRI sensor is on board Meteosat 8 (formerly called Meteosat Second Generation) in a geostationary orbit 35,800 km above the equator, just off the West coast of Africa.
The spinning of the spacecraft and a North-South scan mirror provides an image of the globe every 15 minutes.
The instrument provides a sub-satellite resolution of 3x3 km in 3 visible and 8 infrared channels, plus high-resolution visible channels (1x1 km) for providing false colour imagines.
This type of data is one type of the remote sensing images used in the GlobAEROSOL software to generate global products where the aerosol information is obtained using the Oxford-RAL Aerosol and Cloud retrieval scheme (ORAC) using the visible channels at 0.64, 0.81, 1.6 μm.
Aerosols are a fundamental component of the Earth's atmospheric chemistry and radiative balance. Their importance in atmospheric radiative transfer means that the lack of accurate information on their distribution is a major limitation for weather forecasting.
Terradue is involved in European Commission (EC) BEinGRID project
Business Experiment 7 dedicated to Earth Observation with the objective of implementing near real time data access and processing of aerosol maps. In this project the
gridify creates a application environment where near real time operation can be controlled, monitored and accessed. BEinGRID, Business Experiments in GRID, is the European Union’s largest integrated project funded by the Information Society Technologies (IST) research, part of the EU’s sixth research Framework Programme (FP6) and funded by the European Commission’s Grid Technologies F2 Unit. The BEinGRID consortium is composed 75 partners who are running eighteen Business Experiments designed to implement and deploy Grid solutions in industrial key sectors.