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Due to Copernicus Sentinel-3B Moon calibration, data will be degraded on hereafter products:

  • Copernicus Sentinel-3BSLSTR: products degradation is expected for sensing time from 12/08/2022T07:58:20 to 12/08/2022T08:48:50

  • Copernicus Sentinel-3B OLCI: products degradation is expected for sensing time from 12/08/2022T08:42:52 to 12/08/2022T08:48:50

  • Copernicus Sentinel-3B SRAL: products degradation is expected for sensing time from 12/08/2022T07:59:20 to 12/08/2022T08:30:18

Due to S3B Sentinel-3B Orbit Correction Manoeuvre occurred from 9th of August at 07:55:45 UTC to 9th of August at 08:05:35, SLSTR data in the specified period may be degraded.

Copernicus Sentinel-1A was unavailable between 21:31 UTC on 6 August 2022 and 08:26 UTC on 7 August 2022, due to a SAR antenna anomaly. No data were generated during this period.

We apologize for the inconvenience this may have caused.

Due to S3A SLSTR instrument anomaly occurred from 1st of August 2022 at 01:56:08 UTC to 4th of August 2022 at 03:57:02 UTC, SLSTR data in the specified period is unavailable or degraded.

The European Space Agency and the European Commission announce the end of the mission for the Copernicus Sentinel-1B satellite and regret the inconvenience caused to the Copernicus Services, Copernicus Participating States, and the many users worldwide affected by the lack of Sentinel-1B data.

Following the previous news on the Sentinel-1B anomaly that occurred on 23 December 2021, the very detailed investigations related to the satellite power system’s affected unit have been completed. The conclusions drawn by the Anomaly Review Board resulted in the impossibility to recover the 28V regulated bus of the C-SAR Antenna Power Supply unit (CAPS), which provides power to the radar electronics. The capability of Sentinel-1B to support the mission is therefore considered lost.

A summary report of the description of the anomaly, of the investigations and the recovery attempts, as well as the parallel Sentinel-1 mission level actions and way forward is available here.

Copernicus Sentinel-1A remains fully operational. Strong efforts have been deployed to launch Sentinel-1C as early as possible, the current plans target a launch in the second quarter of 2023. The successful VEGA-C maiden flight on 13 July 2022 marks a major milestone towards the launch of Sentinel-1C.

The Sentinel-1B satellite remains under control, all systems except the power affected unit, which prevents the radar from being switched on, continue to function nominally. Regular orbit control manoeuvres are routinely performed. The preparation of the Sentinel-1B disposal phase has started. It requires detailed analyses in the domains of satellite engineering, mission analysis and flight operations. This preparatory phase is planned to last until the end March 2023, indicatively. The execution of the Sentinel-1B disposal cannot take place in parallel to the Sentinel-1A operations and to the Sentinel-1C related activities (launch preparation, launch execution and Commissioning). The start of the Sentinel-1B disposal is therefore planned to take place after the Sentinel-1C In-Orbit Commissioning Review (IOCR), indicatively during the third quarter of 2023. The de-orbiting activities will last several months (current estimate in the order of 9 months).

The de-orbiting of Sentinel-1B is an example of ESA’s and EU’s commitments to clean and responsible space. It will be performed according to the safety and clean space environment requirements in place for ESA projects at the time of design of Sentinel-1A and Sentinel-1B (re-entry in the atmosphere within maximum 25 years).

As a consequence of a ground segment anomaly, the Sentinel-2A systematic production was stopped the 02 August from 00:00:00 UTC to 08:30:00 UTC, leading to all S2A production unavailable. 

An update will follow with the plans for the recovery of the impacted production. 

We apologise for any inconvenience this might cause to your activities.

Due to Sentinel-3A SLSTR instrument anomaly, SLSTR data degradation or unavailability is expected starting from 1st of August 2022 at 01:56:00 UTC. Issue is under investigation.

Due to unavailability of auxiliary data required for the Sentinel-5P Methane (CH4) processing, data from orbit 24790 2022-07-26T17:11:49 have degraded quality and should be used with care. An update of this news will be provided when additional information are available.

Our apologies for any inconvenience.

As previously announced, the update of the Copernicus Sentinel-5 Precursor (S5p) operational ground-processing system has been put in place. This implies that Level 1B products are now processed with the new processor version 02.01.00., Level 2 Ozone (O3), Tropospheric O3, CLOUD, Sulphur Dioxide (SO2) and Formaldehyde (HCHO) products, which belong to the same processor suite, are now processed with the new processor version 02.04.01. Level 2 Methane (CH4), Carbon Monoxide (CO), Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2), Ozone Profile (O3_PR) Aerosol Layer Height (AER_LH) and Aerosol Index (AER_AI) are now processed with the new processor version 02.04.00.

As already announced, following the update, the quality of SO2 and HCHO production may be of temporarily reduced quality for 2 to 3 days whilst the background calibration is re-established, in additionthe L2 OFFL data between orbits 24655 – 24687 have been processed using in input the previous version of the L1B data, which is not optimal; therefore these data should be used with care.

The data processed with the new version are available on the Copernicus S5P Hub starting with the orbits/dates provided below. Please note that the Near Real Time (NRTI) products for data acquired during the processing downtime period were not generated.

Data orbits/dates starting from:

  • L1B: orbit 24688, 2022-07-19
  • NRTI: orbit 24697, 2022-07-20
  • OFFL: orbit 24655, 2022-07-17

Detailed information will be provided within the Product Readme Files.

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