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Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
27,061 datasets
CERES ERBE-like Gridded Instantaneous TOA Fluxes Aqua Crosstrack Edition4 is a satellite-derived Earth radiation budget data product from NASA. It likely contains monthly averaged top-of-atmosphere shortwave and longwave fluxes sorted into 2.5-degree spatial regions, with hourly and daily averages for both clear-sky and total-sky scenes. Data collection is ongoing using the CERES-FM3 and FM4 instruments on the Aqua satellite launched in 2002.
CERES instruments on Terra and Aqua satellites provide radiometric measurements of Earth's atmosphere from three broadband channels. The ES-9 product contains a month of space and time-averaged CERES data, sorted into 2.5-degree spatial regions, with daily and hourly average fluxes for clear-sky and total-sky scenes. This data is a follow-on to the ERBE mission and is a key component of NASA's Earth Observing System.
CERES instruments on the Terra satellite provide radiometric measurements of Earth's atmosphere from three broadband channels. The Edition4 product contains a month of space and time-averaged data, sorted into 2.5-degree spatial regions, with daily and monthly averages for both clear-sky and total-sky scenes. Data collection for this product is ongoing.
Geostationary satellite data provides monthly and 3-hourly gridded regional mean cloud properties, stratified by pressure, optical depth, and phase across 18 cloud types. The Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) instruments, launched on multiple missions from 1997 to 2017, collected this daytime-only product for spatial consistency. Data collection for this product is complete.
Pole-to-pole coverage of monthly and 3-hourly gridded cloud properties from the Aqua satellite's CERES-FM3 and MODIS instruments. The data product, created by NASA's CERES program, stratifies cloud fractions by pressure, optical depth, and phase across 42 cloud types. Data collection for this product is complete.
Edition2F data from the CERES FM1 instrument on the Terra satellite, launched December 18, 1999. The product contains regional averages of instantaneous radiative fluxes at the top-of-atmosphere, surface, and atmospheric profile levels, along with cloud parameters, averaged monthly over 1-degree spatial regions and by observation hour. It is a key component of NASA's Earth Observing System (EOS) program.
CERES Monthly Gridded Radiative Fluxes and Clouds Terra FM1 Edition2G is a satellite-derived Earth science dataset from NASA. It contains regional averages of radiative fluxes at the top-of-atmosphere, surface, and within the atmosphere, alongside cloud parameters, averaged monthly from the CERES-FM1 instrument on the Terra satellite. Data collection for this specific product is complete.
CERES FSW TRMM-PFM-VIRS Edition2C is a Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) monthly gridded data product for the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM). It contains regional averages of instantaneous footprint computed fluxes at the top-of-atmosphere, surface, and within the atmosphere, along with cloud parameters, averaged by 1-degree spatial regions and observation hour. The data collection is complete, with the first CERES instrument launched on November 27, 1997.
CERES-MODIS and hourly geostationary cloud properties stratified by 18 ISCCP cloud types for day and night. The product combines data from Terra-MODIS, Aqua-MODIS, and five geostationary satellites to provide diurnally complete coverage. NASA's CERES instruments, launched on satellites from TRMM in 1997 to NOAA-20 in 2017, provide the radiometric measurements.
Twenty-eight drifting buoys collected oceanographic data for the Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere Response Experiment (COARE) between August 1992 and September 1993. The dataset includes observations from French BODEGA drifters deployed along meridians 165E and 156E in the western tropical Pacific. Data was submitted by Yves Du Penhoat of ORSTOM, New Caledonia, and coordinated with deployments by researchers from the University of California, San Diego.
Geoscience Australia Data provides research on the tectonic opening of the Tasmanian Gateway and its impact on ocean circulation and climate over the last 33 million years. The volume includes 344 pages of analysis from the Cenozoic era, covering topics from rift history to marine biostratigraphy. It was published in 2004 as part of the Geophysical Monograph Series.
Version 1.2 reanalysis products derived from CYGNSS satellite constellation measurements, with a latency of approximately 1 to 2 months from the last recorded measurement time. The dataset provides time-tagged and geolocated average wind speed and mean square slope data at 25x25 kilometer resolution. It is produced by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and represents an improved calibration accuracy and long-term stability over previous versions.
NASA's CYGNSS satellite constellation provides a daily Climate Data Record of ocean surface wind speed and mean square slope on a 0.2x0.2 degree grid. Version 1.2 data, derived from Level 1 SDR v3.1, features improved calibration accuracy and long-term stability using a trackwise correction algorithm. A single netCDF-4 file is produced for each day with an approximate 5-day latency.
Version 3.1 data supersedes Version 3.0, with updated geophysical model functions and a new wave height-based correction. The dataset provides daily netCDF files containing time-tagged and geolocated average wind speed and mean square slope measurements from the CYGNSS satellite constellation, with a latency of approximately 6 days. It is produced by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Surface underway data from the RV Laurence M. Gould includes measurements of barometric pressure, partial pressure of carbon dioxide in air and water, salinity, and sea surface temperature. The data were collected across the South Atlantic, South Pacific, and Southern Oceans (>60Β°S) over multiple cruises spanning from 2002-03-07 to 2003-12-29. Instruments used include a carbon dioxide gas analyzer and a shower head chamber equilibrator for autonomous CO2 measurement.
Bathythermograph (XBT) and high-resolution Conductivity, Temperature, Depth (CTD) data were collected from the R/V Seaward Explorer in the North Atlantic Ocean's Florida Straits. The dataset contains 138 CTD observations collected between November 23, 1990, and November 18, 1991, under a Minerals Management Service contract. Data was submitted by Dr. Evans Waddell of Science Applications, Inc. and processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center into standard F022-CTD and C116 file formats.
NCEI Accession 0157425 contains surface underway measurements of carbon dioxide partial pressure and related variables from ten research cruises aboard the R/V F.G. Walton Smith. Data collection occurred from February to September 2012 across the Caribbean Sea, Gulf of Mexico, Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, and North Atlantic Ocean. The dataset includes air-sea difference calculations for carbon dioxide, barometric pressure, salinity, and sea surface temperature, collected using carbon dioxide gas analyzers and equilibrators.
Current meter components data were collected from fixed platforms in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean west of 40Β°W starting on 19 February 1992. The dataset, processed to the NODC F015 standard format, contains time series measurements of east-west (u) and north-south (v) current vector components, typically at 10-15 minute intervals. It also likely contains supporting data such as water temperature, pressure, and salinity from sensor moorings deployed for the Physical Oceanography Field Program Offshore North Carolina.
NCEI Accession 0157248 contains surface underway chemical, meteorological, and physical data collected by the RV Tangaroa research vessel across the Arafura Sea, Coral Sea, South Pacific Ocean, Tasman Sea, and Timor Sea. The dataset includes measurements of the partial pressure of carbon dioxide in air and water, barometric pressure, salinity, and sea surface temperature, collected using a Carbon dioxide (CO2) gas analyzer. Data were gathered during nine distinct research cruises led by Dr. Kim I Currie of the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Limited between February and December 2014.
1980 to present data provides total direct loss assessments for U.S. weather and climate disasters, including tropical cyclones, floods, droughts, severe storms, wildfires, freezes, and winter storms. The dataset synthesizes information from multiple public and private sources such as FEMA, USDA, and insurance claim services. Support for this product ceased in May 2025 due to federal budget reductions.