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Image of the week
2024
January
February
March
April
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Lisbon, Portugal, 5 – 6 November 2024
This event will showcase user uptake of marine data made available by the EU Copernicus programme.
Satellite data were used to monitor a red tide event in South Africa in early 2022.
Quantifying ocean carbon is essential for understanding climate change.
22 April 2024
European State of the Climate 2023 details unwelcome records for heatwaves and extreme weather events
This week’s image of the week focuses on Saharan dust.
The bloom is most likely caused by coccolithophores (cyan colour) and other phytoplankton species. Phytoplankton play a key role in marine ecosystems as the basis of the food chain.
The MIDAS project studied the use of scatterometer wind data within mesoscale Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) models.
The cloud patterns are known as von Kármán vortices and are formed over the ocean when islands disrupt the wind flow. The strength of the wind affects the patterns of the swirls.
Storm Kathleen was a deep area of low pressure that moved towards the UK and Ireland from the southwest, bringing unseasonably strong winds and causing travel and power disruption.
Celebrating the eighth anniversary of the launch of Copernicus Sentinel-3A.
The bright offshore bloom is most likely caused by coccolithophores, microscopic single-celled plant-like organisms that live in large numbers throughout the upper layers of the ocean.
Many fires have been affecting Brazil’s northern most state, Roraima.