Central Equatorial Pacific Experiment
- Dates: 09 March 1993 - 08 April 1993
- Location: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- Science Objective:
The overall scientific goal of CEPEX is to establish
the respective roles of cirrus radiative effects and surface evaporation
in limiting maximum surface temperature in the equatorial Pacific.
Direct in-situ measurement of radiation fluxes, cirrus microphysics,
evaporation rates, and water-vapor distributions must be obtained over
a range of SSTs, from regions where SST is just below the convection
threshold temperature to regions where SST exceeds it.
Spectral Band Configuration
Level-1B Data Processing Status
- Days (Flights) Processed: 10 of 10
- Version Number: 9
- Status: Done!
Browse Imagery
IMPORTANT:
Due to leaky liquid nitrogen dewars on MAS during CEPEX,
channel 7 goes dead roughly 3 hours after take-off, all other NIR
and IR channels die roughly 4.5 hours after take-off. Only the
2 visible channels are unaffected, since they are not liquid
nitrogen cooled. The symptom of a dying channel, as observed in
the browse imagery, is a scene with increasing numbers of black streaks
that eventually obliterate the image and can be observed on several of the
infrared browse images offered below.
- March 09, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- March 11, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- March 15, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- No Data Processed: Navigation Failure
- March 16, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- No Data Processed: Navigation Failure
- March 17, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- March 20, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- March 23, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- No Data Processed: Navigation Failure
- March 25, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- March 28, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- March 30, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- April 03, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- April 04, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
- April 05, 1993: Central Equatorial Pacific Ocean
Data Distribution Point
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