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insert AltLabel (id: null
text: NOAA POES (Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellites)
language code: en); 
""" ;
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  skos:definition """The world's first operational weather satellite system was placed into
service with the launching of the Environmental Satellite Services
Administration (which in 1970 became the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, NOAA) satellites, ESSA-1, on February 3, 1966, and ESSA-2, on
February 28, 1966.  The objective of this program, called the TIROS Operational
System (TOS), was to acquire global observational data routinely on a daily
basis.  This system consisted of a pair of ESSA satellites in sun synchronous
(polar) orbit.  The odd numbered satellites (ESSA-1, 3, 5, 7, and 9) utilized
the Advanced Vidicon Camera System (AVCS) to obtain global imagery which were
transmitted to the ESSA Command and Data Acquisition (CDA) stations at Wallops,
Virginia, and Fairbanks, Alaska.  The CDA stations relayed the data to
the National Environmental Satellite Service (NESS), which later became the
National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service (NESDIS),
located in Suitland, Maryland, for processing and distribution to forecasting
centers of the U.S. and other nations.  The even numbered satellites (ESSA-2,
4, 6, and 8) were equipped with Automatic Picture Transmission (APT) TV cameras
which transmitted television pictures directly to ground stations worldwide.
The ESSA satellites operated in orbits at altitudes of approximately 1450 km.
     The second generation operational polar orbiting satellites started with
the ITOS-1 (Improved TIROS Operational System) mission launched on January 23,
1970 which combined the joint capabilities of two ESSA spacecraft; essentially,
the direct readout APT system and the global stored images of the AVCS.  The
second generation objectives were to provide improved operational Infrared
(IR) and Visible (VIS) observations of Earth cloud cover for use in weather
analysis and forecasting and also to provide solar proton and global heat data
on a daily basis.  ITOS-1 also carried an operational 2 channel Scanning
Radiometer (SR) providing day and night radiometric data for immediate
transmission as well as acquisition data stored for delayed transmission to CDA
stations.  With an Infrared 5 channel scanner, global observation of the Earth
atmosphere and surface areas was available once every 12 hours.  A second ITOS
spacecraft, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration satellite,
NOAA-1, was launched on December 11, 1970.
     The ITOS system evolved further with the development of the ITOS-D
satellites, NOAA-2, 3, 4, and 5 and were placed into orbit in 1972, 1973, 1974,
and 1975, respectively.  These had a new sensor complement to provide day and
night imaging by means of the Very High Resolution Radiometer (VHRR) along with
the medium resolution Scanning Radiometer (SR).  The Vertical Temperature
Profile Radiometer (VTPR) for sounding the atmosphere and the Solar Proton
Monitor (SPM) for measurements of solar proton and electron flux in the
vicinity of the satellite were added.
     The first spacecraft in the third generation operational polar orbiting
environmental satellite system was TIROS-N which was launched in 1978.  The
third generation objectives were to provide observations for the atmosphere,
cloud cover, surface and near-surface.  The TIROS-N type satellites that
followed were NOAA-A (6), NOAA-B which failed to achieve useful orbit, NOAA-C
(7), and NOAA-D.  The TIROS-N system provided NOAA with the global
meteorological and environmental data required for normal operations and for
the experimental World Weather Watch (WWW) Program.  The spacecraft had a new
complement of data gathering instruments.  The Advanced Very High Resolution
Radiometer (AVHRR) provided day and night imaging in the Visible (VIS) and
Infrared (IR), sea surface temperature (SST) determination, estimation of heat
budget components, and identification of snow and sea ice.  The TIROS
Operational Vertical Sounder (TOVS) supplied improved estimates of the vertical
structure of the atmosphere.  The Data Collection System (DCS) gathered
environmental data from fixed and moving platforms such as buoys and
balloons, and transmitted the data to central stations for processing and
relay to users.  The Solar Environment Monitor (SEM) measured solar proton,
electron, and alpha particle densities.  The data collected were stored onboard
the satellite for transmission to the NOAA central processing facility at
Suitland, Maryland, through the Wallops and Fairbanks CDA stations.  Satellite
data also were transmitted in real time direct readout at VHF and S-band
frequencies to remote stations worldwide.
     The Advanced TIROS-N (ATN) type satellites were NOAA-E (8), NOAA-F (9),
NOAA-G (10), NOAA-H (11), NOAA-I (12), and NOAA-J (13), the latter two
scheduled for launch in 1990 and 1991 respectively.  The spacecraft was
lengthened 0.5m and the solar array was enlarged to provide additional power.
New systems were added starting with NOAA-8: the Search and Rescue (SAR)
system; NOAA-9: the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBE) instruments and
the Solar Backscatter UltraViolet (SBUV) radiometer; NOAA-10: ERBE instruments.
For more information about the NOAA POES satellite series link to the
-----------------
Entry taken from:
Rao, P.K., S.J. Holmes, R.K. Anderson, J.S. Winston and P.E. Lehr, Weather
Satellites: Systems, Data, and Environmental Applications, American
Meteorological Society, Boston, 1990.  ISBN 0-933876-66-1
Cornillon, P., A Guide to Environmental Satellite Data, University of Rhode
Island Marine Technical Report 79, 1982.


Group: Platform_Details
   Entry_ID: NOAA POES
   Group: Platform_Identification
      Platform_Category: Earth Observation Satellites
      Platform_Series_or_Entity: NOAA POES (Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellites)
      Short_Name: NOAA POES
      Long_Name: NOAA Polar Orbiting Environmental Satellites
   End_Group
   Group: Synonymous_Platform_Names
      Short_Name: NOAA POES
   End_Group
   Group: Platform_Associated_Instruments
      Short_Name: TOVS
      Short_Name: AVHRR
   End_Group
   Creation_Date: 2007-10-17
   Online_Resource: http://www.oso.noaa.gov/poes/index.htm
   Sample_Image: http://www.oso.noaa.gov/poesstatus/images/poesSpacecraft.gif
   Group: Platform_Logistics
      Primary_Sponsor: NASA
   End_Group
End_Group"""@en ;
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  skos:prefLabel "NOAA POES"@en ;
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