HPDE.io

SNOE Orbital Averages of Nitric Oxide (NO) Density in Geographic Bins

ResourceID
spase://NASA/NumericalData/SNOE/UVS/GEO/PT96M

Description

This level 3 data set from the Student Nitric Oxide Explorer (SNOE) ultraviolet spectrometer (UVS) contains orbital averages of nitric oxide (NO) density for the altitudes range 96.6 to 150 km as deduced from the UVS count rates ([0, 1] gamma band; 237 nm). Averaging was done in geographic coordinates in a 38x20 array, using bins of 5 degree geographic latitude, 3.3 km altitude, and 24 degrees in geographic longitude.

View XML | View JSON | Edit

Details

Version:2.2.2

NumericalData

ResourceID
spase://NASA/NumericalData/SNOE/UVS/GEO/PT96M
ResourceHeader
ResourceName
SNOE Orbital Averages of Nitric Oxide (NO) Density in Geographic Bins
ReleaseDate
2021-03-11 18:39:11Z
Description

This level 3 data set from the Student Nitric Oxide Explorer (SNOE) ultraviolet spectrometer (UVS) contains orbital averages of nitric oxide (NO) density for the altitudes range 96.6 to 150 km as deduced from the UVS count rates ([0, 1] gamma band; 237 nm). Averaging was done in geographic coordinates in a 38x20 array, using bins of 5 degree geographic latitude, 3.3 km altitude, and 24 degrees in geographic longitude.

Acknowledgement
Please acknowledge the Principal Investigator, Dr. Charles A. Barth, and SPDF.
Contacts
RolePersonStartDateStopDateNote
1.PrincipalInvestigatorspase://SMWG/Person/Charles.A.Barth
2.GeneralContactspase://SMWG/Person/Dieter.K.Bilitza
InformationURL
PriorIDs
spase://VSPO/NumericalData/SNOE/UVS/GEO/PT96M
AccessInformation
RepositoryID
Availability
Online
AccessRights
Open
AccessURL
Name
FTPS from SPDF (not with most browsers)
URL
Description

for daily geographic averages via ftp

AccessURL
Name
HTTPS from SPDF
URL
Description

for daily geographic averages via http

Format
Text
InstrumentIDs
MeasurementType
NeutralGas
TemporalDescription
TimeSpan
StartDate
1998-03-11 00:00:00
StopDate
2000-09-30 00:00:00
Cadence
PT96M
ObservedRegion
Earth.NearSurface.Thermosphere