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Merge pull request #1536 from ubilabs/auto/content-for-story-story-32
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feat(stories): update story: story-32
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andreashelms committed May 27, 2024
2 parents 5a8617d + b9bc01c commit c864aff
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},
{
"type": "image",
"type": "video",
"text": "## Tracking Climate Change from Space\r\n\r\nOver the past few decades, Earth observation satellites have given us an unprecedented view of our world and have become an essential tool for monitoring the changing climate. They are particularly useful for monitoring inaccessible areas such as the polar regions, where some of the changes to the climate are at their most extreme.\r\n \r\nThese ‘remote sensors’ measure sea ice expanding and contracting, the slow melt of glaciers and the burn of wildfires, track clouds and aerosols as they move through the atmosphere, and nutrient and temperature patterns swirling through the oceans.\r\n\r\nThe first operational remote sensing missions were in the late 1970s: this means we now have the opportunity to look back through forty years of observations for many climate components, which is long enough to start investigating climate change. However, compiling long time series of satellite data that are useful for climate scientists is a major challenge.\r\n\r\n## Changing Technology\r\n\r\nSatellites typically have a lifespan less than ten years. Other satellites then replace them, built with the latest technology. If they are to achieve consistent and reliable measurements, scientists must take into account differences between instruments, different measurement techniques, and gaps in coverage. \r\n\r\nThe work of these scientists and the climate data records they have produced is the focus of this web app. It includes an [interactive data viewer](https://cfs.climate.esa.int) where you can explore the climate data on 3D globes and 2D world maps.",
"shortText": "## Tracking Climate Change from Space\r\n\r\nOver the past few decades, Earth observation satellites have given us an unprecedented view of our world and have become an essential tool for monitoring the changing climate. \r\n\r\n- They measure the extent of sea ice, glaciers and wildfires, track clouds and aerosols through the atmosphere, nutrient and temperature patterns in the oceans.\r\n- First operational remote sensing missions in the late 1970s.\r\n- We now have forty years of observations for many climate components.\r\n- Long enough to start investigating climate change. \r\n\r\n\r\n## Changing Technology\r\n\r\n- Satellites typically last less than ten years before other satellites and technologies replace them. \r\n- Scientists must take into account differences between instruments, different measurement techniques, and gaps in coverage. \r\n\r\nThe work of these scientists and the climate data records they have produced is the focus of this web app. It includes an interactive data viewer where you can explore the climate data on 3D globes and 2D world maps.",
"imageFits": [
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