Latest Observation
2024.09.10 Tue
[Quick Report] Global sea surface temperature in August 2024 observed by AMSR2
The global monthly average of sea surface temperature has been continuously high since 2023 compared with previous years (Fig. 1). Such anomalously warm conditions were observed in mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, such as around Japan (Fig. 2). JAXA will continue monitoring oceanic variations (AMSR Earth Environment Viewer).


Search by Year
Search by Categories
Tags
-
#Earthquake
-
#Land
-
#Satellite Data
-
#Aerosol
-
#Public Health
-
#GCOM-C
-
#Sea
-
#Atmosphere
-
#Ice
-
#Today's Earth
-
#Flood
-
#Water Cycle
-
#AW3D
-
#G-Portal
-
#EarthCARE
-
#Volcano
-
#Agriculture
-
#Himawari
-
#GHG
-
#GPM
-
#GOSAT
-
#Simulation
-
#GCOM-W
-
#Drought
-
#Fire
-
#Forest
-
#Cooperation
-
#Precipitation
-
#Typhoon
-
#DPR
-
#NEXRA
-
#ALOS
-
#GSMaP
-
#Climate Change
-
#Carbon Cycle
-
#API
-
#Humanities Sociology
-
#AMSR
-
#Land Use Land Cover
-
#Environmental issues
-
#Quick Report
Related Resources
Related Tags
Latest Observation Related Articles
-
Latest Observation 2025.12.03 Wed [Quick Report] Analysis results from satellite precipitation data on the record-breaking heavy rainfall occurring in Southeast Asia in late November 2025 -
Latest Observation 2025.10.01 Wed [Quick Report] Hurricane Humberto “Eye” captured by EarthCARE satellite (Hakuryu) -
Latest Observation 2025.02.28 Fri The world’s largest iceberg, A23a, may have run aground on the continental shelf of South Georgia:
The trajectory of iceberg A23a observed by “GCOM-W”, “ALOS-2” and “ALOS-4” -
Latest Observation 2024.11.06 Wed [Quick Report] Heavy rainfalls in eastern Spain, as seen by the Global Satellite Mapping of Precipitation (GSMaP)