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The monitoring of land subsidence is of vital importance for low-lying countries, but also areas which are prone to peculiar ground instability.

Do you have a success story that you'd like to share, about how data from the Copernicus Sentinels are benefitting your work or society?

If so, please share your experiences and results with us, which we may be able to publish as an article or an interview on our website.

Due to an issue at Ground Segment  level on 11 May, following Near Real Time Copernicus Sentinel-3B data have been missed:

  • OLC  from 2019-05-11T10:49:03 UTC to 2019-05-11T11:33:28 UTC
  • SLSTR from 2019-05-11T105133 UTCto 2019-05-11T123218 UTC
  • SRAL from 2019-05-11T105133 UTCto 2019-05-11T123218 UTC.

Due to a ground segment anomaly, Copernicus Sentinel-2 Level-2A products with sensing time between 00:46:48 UTC on 6 May and 10:06:28 UTC on 9 May are affected by degraded quality on the image radiometry.

A routine decontamination activity of the Copernicus Sentinel-2B MSI is planned to take place over a continuous period of 24-hours between 20 May 2019 12:00 and 21 May 2019 12:00 UTC (corresponding approximately to the period between absolute orbits 11503 to 11517).

Remote sensing and satellite imagery have become common use in monitoring and modelling of various biological and physical characteristics of Earth - now Copernicus Sentinel-1 is giving a new approach for monitoring the evolution of shorelines.

We are pleased to publish the fourth Sentinel Data Access Annual Report. This report for 2018 follows directly on from the 2017 report, and analyses the uptake of Copernicus Sentinel data and the performance of the Sentinel Data Access System during the period from 1 December 2017 to 30 November 2018.

The Living Planet Symposium will take place next week from 13 to 17 May in Milan. ESA is taking the opportunity to invite you to provide feedback on your experience with, and future needs for, data that ESA offers.

One of the main threats for soil degradation is the decline of soil organic carbon—the Copernicus Sentinel-2 satellites are currently being exploited to monitor soil conditions in croplands, in turn supporting the Common Agricultural Policy of the European Union.

Due to a Ground Segment anomaly Copernicus Sentinel-3A data belonging to the orbit 16654, corresponding to the sensing time window 2019-04-29 15:01:00 UTC to 2019-04-29 16:41:00 UTC, are missing.

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Share your stories

success stories

Calling on all interested users of Sentinel data, who would like to submit their results, turning their experiences into 'success stories'.

If you have a good story to tell, of how any of the Sentinel satellites are producing data that bring benefit to your work and/or to society, please contact the Sentinel Online Editor Malì Cecere at: mali.cecere@ejr-quartz.com with your proposals.