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Sentinel-1B

Sentinel-1 is a two satellite constellation with the prime objectives of land and ocean monitoring. The goal of the mission is to provide C-Band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data continuity following the retirement of ERS-2 and the end of the Envisat mission.
To accomplish this the satellites carry a C-SAR sensor, which offers medium and high resolution imaging in all weather conditiions. The C-SAR is capable of obtaining night imagery and detecting small movement on the ground, which makes it useful for land and sea monitoring.
Sentinel-1 will work in a pre-programmed operation mode to avoid conflicts and to produce a consistent long-term data archive built for applications based on long time series.
The mission benefits numerous services. For example, services that relate to the monitoring of Arctic sea-ice extent, routine sea-ice mapping, surveillance of the marine environment, including oil-spill monitoring and ship detection for maritime security, monitoring land-surface for motion risks, mapping for forest, water and soil management and mapping to support humanitarian aid and crisis situations.
The design of Sentinel-1 with its focus on reliability, operational stability, global coverage and quick data delivery is expected to enable the development of new applications and meet the evolving needs of Copernicus.

Sentinel-1B was launched on 25 April 2016, taken into orbit by a Soyuz rocket from Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana. On 3 August 2022 ESA communicated that efforts to recover the mission would end after Sentinel-1B experienced an anomaly which resulted in a loss of data transmission. 

Instrument: Advanced C-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)

- active phased array antenna providing fast scanning in elevation and in azimuth
- dual channel transmit and receive modules and H/V-polarised pairs of slotted waveguides
- incident angle range: 20°- 46°
- swath width: 80-400km swath in four different modes

25 Apr 2016
7years
Polar
Sun synchronous
99 minutes
SAR
Synthetic Aperture Radar
ESA
Monitoring sea ice, oil spills, marine winds, waves & currents, land-use change, land deformation among others, and to respond to emergencies such as floods and earthquakes
Drought
Severe Storm
Tsunami
Earthquake
Extreme Temperature
Flood
Forest Fire
Volcanic Eruption
Mass Movement
No
Information about Sentinel-1B on ESA web page

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