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Sentinel-1A was unavailable on 29 June from 16:27 to 18:16 UTC, due to the need to reset the Payload Data Handling and Transmission (PDHT) system. No SAR observations took place during this period. Data acquired a few hours before this period may have been affected as well.
As a consequence of a ground segment anomaly, the availability in the Data Hubs of several Sentinel-2B L1C products with sensing date between 27 June and 29 June is delayed.

The Sentinel-3 SRAL NRT data in the sensing time from 27 June 2018 14:05 UTC to 28 June 2018 06:45 UTC is delayed due to the Sentinel-3A Ground Segment anomaly on 27 June 2018.

The ground segment anomaly has been resolved.

A Data Hub software upgrade activity is foreseen on the Sentinel-3 Pre-Operations Data Hub on 28 June 2018 from 07:00 to 16:00 UTC.

Due to an OLCI instrument anomaly on 21 June 2018, which has now been resolved, products in the following time window are degraded (L0) and missing (L1/L2):

  • 21 June 2018 at 15:23 UTC to 22 June 2018 09:31 UTC

Due to an OLCI instrument anomaly on 21 June 2018, products starting from 15:23 UTC (sensing time) are degraded (L0) or missing (L1/L2). Instrument recovery activity is ongoing.

Due to a scheduled special operation on the  SLSTR instrument, all the NRT/NTC SL_1_RBT/SL_2_LST user data are not available in the following time intervals:

  • From 07:50 to 12:55 UTC on 18 June 2018.
  • From 07:25 to 12:30 UTC on 19 June 2018.
This week marks 20 years since the manifesto was signed that gave rise to Europe's Copernicus environmental programme. With seven Sentinel satellites already in orbit delivering terabytes of data every day, Copernicus is the biggest provider of Earth observation data in the world.
Due to a planned maintenance of the Sentinel-3 Ground Segment, the S3A NRT data in the sensing time window from 18-06-2018T14:28 UTC to 19-06-2018T02:00 UTC are missing.
The key to monitoring Earth's changing environment and to guaranteeing a consistent stream of satellite data to improve our daily lives is to take the same measurements over the course of decades. But how do you know that measurements from successive satellites, even though identical in build, are like for like?

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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 Editors at: contentmatters4sentinelonline@ejr-quartz.com with your proposals.