Saharan dust Sept 2024

Image of the week: Saharan dust over the Atlantic Ocean

 

Watching our Earth from 36,000km

Saharan dust Sept 2024
Saharan dust Sept 2024

This week’s image of the week is of Saharan dust moving west out over the Atlantic Ocean, as seen from the MTG-I1 geostationary weather satellite, 36,000km above the Earth.

Last Updated

14 November 2024

Published on

30 September 2024

Saharan dust particles are lifted into the atmosphere by gusts of surface wind and can be transported and deposited thousands of kilometres away.

When dust travels over populated areas, it can reduce air quality and impact health by causing respiratory problems and cause flight delays.

Imagery from the MTG-I1 weather satellite can be accessed on EUMETview here.

Saharan dust image

This image was captured by the FCI instrument onboard MTG-I1 at 11:10 UTC on 25 September.

The Meteosat weather satellites provide imagery for the early detection of fast-developing severe weather, weather forecasting and climate monitoring.

More info

Access MTG-I1 imagery

Learn more about Meteosat Third Generation satellites

Access atmospheric data from EUMETSAT User Portal

Learn more about monitoring dust and aerosols from space

Access Copernicus Atmosphere Service

WMO Barcelona Dust Regional Center

Saharan dust Sept 2024

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