Loading...
Loading...
Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
27,087 datasets
ECCO Version 4 Release 4 provides hourly global mean atmospheric pressure from a dynamically consistent ocean and sea-ice state estimate. The dataset is produced by NASA and covers a 26-year period from 1992-01-01 to 2018-01-01. It assimilates observations from multiple satellite missions and in-situ programs including altimeters, radiometers, gravimeters, and Argo floats.
Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) submitted this dataset of moored current meter and pressure gauge observations from the Gulf of Alaska, collected between April 22 and September 26, 1989, as part of the Fisheries-Oceanography Cooperative Investigations (FOCI) project. Data are processed to the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC) standard F015 and F017 formats, which contain time series of current vector components and seawater pressure. The data likely contain measurements of east-west and north-south current components, total pressure, and may include water temperature, salinity, and sensor metadata.
Skin sea surface temperature (SST) measurements derived from the far infrared channels of the GOES-15 satellite. The data is processed into GHRSST Level 2P format with Single Sensor Error Statistics (SSES) and provided in full resolution on a half-hourly basis, subset into regional granules. The dataset is produced by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) from the GOES-15 satellite launched in March 2010.
A global sea surface temperature dataset produced in real-time from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer on the NOAA-18 satellite. The data is derived from Global Area Coverage (GAC) sampling, yielding a final resolution of 8.8 km, and is used operationally by the US Naval Oceanographic Office. The AVHRR sensor measures radiance in 5 or 6 spectral bands, with the 11 and 12 micron channels typically used for SST retrieval.
A global sea surface temperature dataset produced in real-time from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer on the NOAA-19 satellite, launched 6 February 2009. The US Naval Oceanographic Office produces this data for operational oceanographic analyses and forecasts. The dataset is derived from Global Area Coverage data, resulting in a final resolution of 8.8 km.
TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI) data provides sea surface temperature (SST) retrievals from a satellite launched on 27 November 1997. The dataset, produced by Remote Sensing Systems for GHRSST, uses a Version-4 algorithm on the 10.7 GHz channel to measure SST through clouds. The satellite covers a semi-equatorial orbit between 38S and 38N, with observation times varying day-to-day.
Indian Ocean sea surface temperature data at 0.04-degree spatial resolution, produced by the Naval Oceanographic Office from the EWS-G1 geostationary satellite. The dataset provides 48 half-hour granules per day, with data calculated from 4-micron and 11-micron channels for nighttime and daytime measurements, updated with a 24-hour latency. It follows the GHRSST Data Specification version 2 and has been fully operational since September 8, 2020.
NOAA-19 satellite data provides sea surface temperature retrievals from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer, launched in February 2009. The dataset is produced operationally by the US Naval Oceanographic Office from Local Area Coverage data, binned to a final resolution of 2.2 km. Coverage generally includes ocean scenes adjacent to Australia and the North Indian Ocean.
A global 0.25 degree resolution sea surface temperature analysis produced by the JPL Physical Oceanography DAAC. The dataset integrates nighttime skin and subskin SST observations from multiple satellite instruments, including AMSR-E, MODIS, WindSat, and AVHRR, along with in-situ data from NOAA iQuam. It was created under the NASA MEaSUREs program and adheres to GHRSST Data Processing Specification version 2 format.
A Group for High Resolution Sea Surface Temperature (GHRSST) global Level 4 sea surface temperature analysis produced daily by Remote Sensing Systems for NASA. The dataset provides a 0.25-degree grid resolution global picture of sea surface temperature using optimal interpolation from multiple microwave satellite sensors, with through-cloud capabilities. Version 5.0 includes updates to the diurnal warming model, sensor-specific error statistics, sensor correlation model, and quality mask.
A daily operational sea surface temperature analysis produced by the Naval Oceanographic Office on a global 0.1x0.1 degree grid. The K10 Level 4 product synthesizes data from multiple satellite instruments, including AVHRR, VIIRS, and SEVIRI, to represent SST at a 1-meter reference depth. This updated version uses the GHRSST Data Specification v2.0 format and adds a sea ice fraction variable.
A daily operational sea surface temperature analysis produced by the UK Met Office using optimal interpolation on a global 0.05x0.05 degree grid. The analysis integrates data from over 10 unique satellite sensors and in-situ sources from ships and buoys, specifically designed as a lower boundary condition for Numerical Weather Prediction models. This dataset is updated daily with a 24-hour nominal latency in Near Real Time mode.
GHRSST Level 2P data provides skin sea surface temperature (SST) measurements derived from the SEVIRI instrument on the Meteosat-9 satellite. The dataset is produced by NOAA NESDIS following the GHRSST-PP Data Processing Specification version 2.0, offering observations at approximately 5 km resolution with a 15-minute duty cycle.
GHRSST Level 2P skin sea surface temperature data derived from the GOES-13 satellite's infrared imager. The dataset provides full-resolution measurements on a half-hourly basis, processed following the GHRSST Data Processing Specification version 2.0 and subsetted into regional granules by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Tropical regions between 38Β°S and 38Β°N are covered by this sea surface temperature dataset. It contains microwave-derived subskin SST measurements from the TRMM satellite's TMI instrument, launched in 1997. Remote Sensing Systems produced the dataset for GHRSST using an algorithm on the 10.7 GHz channel to remove surface roughness effects.
A daily global sea surface temperature analysis produced on a 0.09-degree grid by Remote Sensing Systems for the Group for High Resolution Sea Surface Temperature (GHRSST). It combines data from multiple microwave and infrared satellite sensors using optimal interpolation, with version 5.1 including updates to input files and error statistics. The dataset is provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and was last updated in March 2026.
A daily global sea surface temperature analysis on a 0.25-degree grid produced by Remote Sensing Systems for the GHRSST project. The product uses optimal interpolation from multiple microwave satellite sensors, including TRMM TMI, AMSR-E, WindSat, GMI, and AMSR2, leveraging their through-cloud measurement capabilities. Version 5.1, updated in March 2026, addresses processing deficiencies from the previous version and uses updated sensor-specific error statistics.
A global Level 4 sea surface temperature (SST) analysis produced daily on a 0.09-degree grid by Remote Sensing Systems for the Group for High Resolution Sea Surface Temperature (GHRSST). This version 5.0 product uses optimal interpolation (OI) to blend data from multiple microwave and infrared satellite sensors, including GMI, TMI, AMSRE, AMSR2, WindSat, MODIS, and VIIRS. The dataset was last updated by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration on March 13,ζ们εη°δΊδΈδΈͺιθ――γ
NASA's Global Land Data Assimilation System Version 2.1 (GLDAS-2.1) Early Product provides 34 land surface fields simulated with the Catchment-F2.5 Land Surface Model. The dataset has a 1.5-month latency and contains 3-hourly, 1.0-degree resolution data from January 2000 to the present. It is forced with a combination of NOAA/GDAS atmospheric analysis, GPCP precipitation, and AGRMET radiation fields.
From April 28 to June 29, 1988, this dataset contains oceanographic measurements collected via moored current meters and CTD casts in the Gulf of Alaska from the R/V Alpha Helix and other platforms. The data, processed by the National Oceanographic Data Center (NODC), includes time-series current vector components at 10-15 minute intervals and high-resolution vertical profiles of temperature and salinity. It was collected by the University of Alaska Fairbanks Institute of Marine Science.