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ESA is pleased to announce the official release of the Copernicus Sea and Land Surface Temperature Radiometer (SLSTR) Sentinel-3A and -3B products on the Open Access Hub.

Following the announcement on 12 March, the publication of Copernicus Sentinel-2 L2A products on the nominal flow resumed as of 18:00 UTC on 13 March.

Following the official release of the Copernicus Sentinel-5P Methane (CH4) data, reprocessed CH4 data products ('RPRO' tag in filename) have also now been made available on the Copernicus Sentinel-5P Pre-operations Data Hub.

As a side effect of the infrastructure maintenance scheduled on 12 March 2019, the publication of Copernicus Sentinel-2 L2A products has been impacted and are currently suspended since 13:00 UTC, 12 March 2019.
New maps that use information from the Copernicus Sentinel-5P satellite reveal nitrogen dioxide emission being released into the atmosphere in cities and towns across the globe.
Referring to the earlier announcement of 7 March 2019, users are informed that the deployment of the subject evolution planned on 11 March was cancelled due to shortcomings identified in the product quality validation performed in preparation of this evolution.
Due to a Ground Segment anomaly occurred on 9 March 2019, Near Real Time, Non Time Critical and Short Time Critical Copernicus Sentinel-3B products related to orbit #4528 are completely missed (sensing time from 09-03-2019T06:22:47 UTC to 09-03-2019T08:04:17 UTC).

An international group of scientists have published the first study using data from the Copernicus Sentinel-3 Delay-Doppler altimeter, to monitor Antarctic Ice Sheet change.

Users are informed that some Copernicus Sentinel-2B planned acquisitions have been lost due to a collision avoidance manoeuvre executed on the evening of 06 and 07 March.
On Monday 11 March 2019, a minor change of the Copernicus Sentinel-2 Level-1C and Level-2A products will be implemented: the compression rate of the Preview Image (PVI) will be reduced in order to improve the quality of the images.

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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.