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Climate models, weather data, oceanography, hydrology, atmospheric science, environmental monitoring
25,137 datasets
NOAA-20 VIIRS VJ143C3 provides daily global albedo and bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) data at a 0.05-degree resolution. The dataset contains white-sky and black-sky albedos for 13 spectral bands, derived using a semi-empirical kernel-driven model over a 16-day moving window. It includes ancillary layers for uncertainty, quality, local solar noon, percent inputs, and snow cover to support climate simulation models.
Global observations from the Aura satellite's Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) provide geolocated spectral radiance data in the visible wavelength range of 349 to 504 nm. Each orbit's daylit portion yields approximately 14 files per day, with each file containing radiances for 60 ground pixels across a ~2600 km swath at 751 spectral channels. The data is stored in netCDF format and supports analysis of Earth's reflected sunlight.
Sounder SIPS: JPSS-1 ATMS Level 3 RAMSES2 Standard Gridded Monthly V3 at GES DISC is a NASA dataset containing geophysical parameters retrieved from NOAA-20 satellite microwave sounder observations. The RAMSES II algorithm processes data from the 22-channel Advanced Technology Microwave Sounder (ATMS) to produce all-weather retrievals of temperature profiles, water in all phases, and surface properties. Data is provided as a monthly, one-degree latitude by one-degree longitude gridded product with quality control flags for each variable.
1.8 GB of processed WRF model outputs and meteorological observations for a study on atmospheric interactions in complex terrain. The model component includes two simulations (CTRL and MOD) with three nested domains, providing surface and near-surface variables. The observational component contains high-frequency 1-minute measurements from a tower in Innisfree Village, Virginia, USA, covering 2020-2021.
From November 2008 to September 2010, a network of 16 Parsivel disdrometers was deployed on the EPFL campus in Lausanne, Switzerland, to measure precipitation. The dataset provides raw and filtered volumetric drop size distribution data, designed to cover a typical operational radar pixel area of about 1 square kilometer. It also includes a list of precipitation events that occurred during the study period.
GPM Ground Validation Physicum Building Mast Meteorological Data LPVEx V1 consists of meteorological measurements collected from the SMEAR III rooftop station at the University of Helsinki. The data, including temperature, pressure, wind, precipitation, and radiation, were gathered from September 16 to October 22, 2010, to support the Light Precipitation Validation Experiment (LPVEx) field campaign. This high-latitude ground truth dataset was created to improve precipitation retrieval algorithms for the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission satellites.
Atmospheric sounding data collected by the North Carolina State University student sounding club for the IMPACTS field campaign. The dataset includes vertical profiles of temperature, humidity, pressure, and wind, launched from Raleigh, NC on February 20, 2020. IMPACTS was a three-year campaign (2020-2022) studying snowstorms over the U.S. Atlantic Coast.
Ziwu Pan's dataset supports the mechanistic analysis of blueโgreen space cooling island effects across heterogeneous urban environments. The 2.4 GB collection combines geospatial analysis and numerical simulations, likely containing results from Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model runs for urban agglomerations. It was last updated on 2026-05-06 and is released under a CC-BY-4.0 license.
Glasgow, UK, groundwater and surface water chemistry data from 86 samples collected by the British Geological Survey between September 2020 and May 2021. The release includes data from 6 surface water sites, 5 mine water boreholes, and 5 environmental monitoring boreholes, analyzed for selected chemical parameters. It contains a report and two data sheets.
From June 2021 to January 2022, the British Geological Survey collected and analyzed 99 water samples from the UK Geoenergy Observatories Glasgow facility. The release includes chemistry data from 33 surface water and 60 groundwater samples, plus 6 duplicates, taken from 6 surface water sites and 10 boreholes. It contains a report and two data sheets, GroundWaterChemData2 and SurfaceWaterChemData3.
2007-2020 water quality data collected by the NSW Department of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water for over 160 estuaries. Monitoring follows standard protocols outlined in the NSW Natural Resources Monitoring, Evaluation and Reporting Program. The data supports the development of NSW-specific guideline values for physico-chemical indicators.
Soela voyage SO 1/84 collected hydrology data from the North West Shelf between 25 January and 25 February 1984. The processed dataset likely contains measurements from water samples, including temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, and nutrients like phosphate and nitrate. It is archived by the CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research Data Centre.
OPERA validated products provide coregistered, radiometrically corrected Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) backscatter and surface displacement measurements derived from Copernicus Sentinel-1 data. The suite includes Single Look Complex (CSLC) images with amplitude and phase for interferometry, Radiometric Terrain Corrected (RTC) backscatter normalized to topography, and Level-3 displacement products from time-series analysis. These datasets are processed to a consistent 30-meter grid and are available for North America and near-global land masses from 2016 onward.
2012 to 2015 data provides Level 1 polarimetric radar backscattering coefficients (sigma-0) from the NASA AirMOSS P-band SAR instrument. Collected during biannual flight campaigns over 10 North American study sites, including La Selva Biological Station, this dataset supports retrieval of root-zone soil moisture. The NASA project aims to analyze seasonal and inter-annual soil moisture variability and its relationship to continental carbon fluxes.
Level 1 polarimetric radar backscatter data was collected over the Howland Forest site in Maine by a NASA Gulfstream-III aircraft from 2012 to 2015. The AirMOSS P-band synthetic aperture radar instrument operates in the 420-440 MHz band to measure root-zone soil moisture. This dataset supports continental-scale analysis of seasonal soil moisture variability and its relationship to carbon fluxes.
AirMOSS Level 1 data contains polarimetric radar backscattering coefficients (sigma-0) from a NASA Gulfstream-III aircraft. The dataset covers at least biannual flight campaigns from 2012 to 2015 across 10 study sites in North America, focusing on the MOISST site in Oklahoma. Collected by NASA, this P-band synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data is designed for retrieving root-zone soil moisture to analyze its seasonal variability and relationship to continental carbon fluxes.
Seven North American sites recorded calibrated hourly precipitation from September 2011 to December 2015. NASA's AirMOSS project collected this data using three rain gauges per site to calibrate and validate airborne radar estimates of root-zone soil moisture. The dataset represents a multi-year, multi-site observational campaign supporting subsurface hydrological research.
Level 1 polarimetric radar backscattering coefficient data was collected by the Airborne Microwave Observatory of Subcanopy and Subsurface instrument over the Walnut Gulch site in Arizona. The dataset contains calibrated and georeferenced P-band SAR products from at least biannual flight campaigns across 10 North American study sites between 2012 and 2015. NASA produced this data to retrieve root-zone soil moisture and investigate its seasonal and inter-annual relationship to carbon fluxes.
Level 1 polarimetric radar backscattering coefficient data were collected by the Airborne Microwave Observatory of Subcanopy and Subsurface instrument over the Tonzi Ranch site in California. The dataset contains calibrated and georeferenced P-band synthetic aperture radar measurements designed for retrieving root-zone soil moisture. Flight campaigns occurred at least twice per year from 2012 to 2015 across 10 study sites in North America, with data produced by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
Survey data from 416 participants rating 20 common street tree species in Adelaide on attractiveness, comfort, safety, and willingness to stay. The dataset integrates these public perception scores with climate suitability assessments for the same species under projected hot-dry conditions. It was authored by Linglue Xia and last updated in May 2026.