Published on: November 25, 2025
SENTINEL-6B
SENTINEL-6B
NEWS –
- Sentinel-6B, a joint mission of NASA, NOAA (US) and the European Space Agency (ESA), was launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base, California, on 17 November 2025.
- It is designed to provide precise sea-level measurements, crucial for climate monitoring and disaster forecasting.
HIGHLIGHTS
Key Features of Sentinel-6B
- Second satellite in the Sentinel-6 series, following Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich (operational since 2020).
- Equipped with six scientific instruments to measure:
- Sea-level rise
- Ocean temperature and currents
- Atmospheric conditions
- Orbit speed: ~7.2 km/s
- Orbital period: ~112 minutes (one Earth revolution)
Objectives of the Mission
- Monitor global sea-level rise with accuracy up to ~1 inch, covering 90% of global oceans.
- Generate long-term, climate-quality datasets to understand ocean-atmosphere interactions.
- Extend the 30-year satellite altimetry record that began in the 1990s with NASA missions.
Importance of Ocean Data
- Weather Forecasting: Enhances accuracy of short- and medium-range predictions.
- Storm & Flood Prediction: Improves modelling of extreme events like cyclones, storm surges and heavy rainfall.
- Maritime Security: Supports navigation, shipping routes, fisheries, and safeguarding undersea cables and pipelines.
- Climate Change Assessment: Tracks thermal expansion of oceans—a major contributor to sea-level rise.
Relevance for India
- Crucial for IMD’s monsoon predictions, cyclone early warnings, and coastal management.
- Helps protect vulnerable coastlines such as the Sundarbans, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, and Gujarat.
- Supports India’s programmes like Sagarmala, Blue Economy initiatives, and disaster-resilient infrastructure.
