23 research outputs found
Sea Surface Salinity: The Next Remote Sensing Challenge
A brief history of salinity remote sensing is presented. The role of sea surface salinity (SSS) in the far north Atlantic and the influence of salinity variations on upper ocean dynamics in the tropics are described. An assessment of the present state of the technology of the SSS satellite remote sensing is given
The Determination of Surface Salinity with the European SMOS Space Mission
The European Space Agency Soil Moisture and
Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission aims at obtaining global maps of
soil moisture and sea surface salinity from space for large-scale and
climatic studies. It uses an L-band (1400–1427 MHz) Microwave
Interferometric Radiometer by Aperture Synthesis to measure
brightness temperature of the earth’s surface at horizontal and
vertical polarizations ( h and v). These two parameters will be
used together to retrieve the geophysical parameters. The retrieval
of salinity is a complex process that requires the knowledge of
other environmental information and an accurate processing of
the radiometer measurements. Here, we present recent results
obtained from several studies and field experiments that were part
of the SMOS mission, and highlight the issues still to be solved
Highlights of the First 15 Months of Aquarius Salinity Measurements
Aquarius satellite salinity measurements are resolving the major global and regional spatial patterns, and temporal variations, since the start of routine data collection on 25 August 2011. This description includes the principal seasonal variations over the first annual cycle as observed by the mission. In particular, we identify the evolution of low salinity anomalies associated with the Atlantic and Pacific intertropical convergence zones (ITCZ), major river outflows such as the Amazon, a seasonal low salinity anomaly in the Panama bight, and other features. We also explore the links that the salinity variations have with precipitation and surface currents. We then will describe the variations related to the presently evolving 2012 El Nino, now evident, as it progresses through the summer and fall 2012. We conclude with a brief summary of the Aquarius data products and validatio
Validation and Error Analysis of OSCAR Sea Surface Currents
Comparisons of OSCAR satellite-derived sea surface currents with in situ data from moored current meters, drifters, and shipboard current profilers indicate that OSCAR presently provides accurate time means of zonal and meridional currents, and in the near-equatorial region reasonably accurate time variability (correlation = 0.5–0.8) of zonal currents at periods as short as 40 days and meridional wavelengths as short as 8°. At latitudes higher than 10° the zonal current correlation remains respectable, but OSCAR amplitudes diminish unrealistically. Variability of meridional currents is poorly reproduced, with severely diminished amplitudes and reduced correlations relative to those for zonal velocity on the equator. OSCAR’s RMS differences from drifter velocities are very similar to those experienced by the ECCO (Estimating the Circulation and Climate of the Ocean) data-assimilating models, but OSCAR generally provides a larger ocean-correlated signal, which enhances its ratio of estimated signal over noise. Several opportunities exist for modest improvements in OSCAR fidelity even with presently available datasets
AQUARIUS: A Passive/Active Microwave Sensor to Monitor Sea Surface Salinity Globally from Space
Salinity is important for understanding ocean dynamics, energy exchange with the atmosphere and the global water cycle. Existing data is limited and much of the ocean has never even been sampled. Sea surface salinity can be measured remotely by satellite and a three year mission for this purpose called AquariudSAC-D has recently been selected by NASA's Earth System Science Pathfinder (ESSP) program. The objective is to map the salinity field globally with a spatial resolution of 100 km and a monthly average accuracy of 0.2 psu. The mission, scheduled for launch in 2008, is a partnership of the United States National Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA) and the Argentine Comision National de Actividades Epaciales (CONAE)
Assessment of Aquarius Sea Surface Salinity
Aquarius was the first NASA satellite to observe the sea surface salinity (SSS) over the global ocean. The mission successfully collected data from 25 August 2011 to 7 June 2015. The Aquarius project released its final version (Version-5) of the SSS data product in December 2017. The purpose of this paper is to summarize the validation results from the Aquarius Validation Data System (AVDS) and other statistical methods, and to provide a general view of the Aquarius SSS quality to the users. The results demonstrate that Aquarius has met the mission target measurement accuracy requirement of 0.2 psu on monthly averages on 150 km scale. From the triple point analysis using Aquarius, in situ field and Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) products, the root mean square errors of Aquarius Level-2 and Level-3 data are estimated to be 0.17 psu and 0.13 psu, respectively. It is important that caution should be exercised when using Aquarius salinity data in areas with high radio frequency interference (RFI) and heavy rainfall, close to the coast lines where leakage of land signals may significantly affect the quality of the SSS data, and at high-latitude oceans where the L-band radiometer has poor sensitivity to SSS
The Determination of Surface Salinity with the European SMOS Space Mission
The European Space Agency Soil Moisture and
Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission aims at obtaining global maps of
soil moisture and sea surface salinity from space for large-scale and
climatic studies. It uses an L-band (1400–1427 MHz) Microwave
Interferometric Radiometer by Aperture Synthesis to measure
brightness temperature of the earth’s surface at horizontal and
vertical polarizations ( h and v). These two parameters will be
used together to retrieve the geophysical parameters. The retrieval
of salinity is a complex process that requires the knowledge of
other environmental information and an accurate processing of
the radiometer measurements. Here, we present recent results
obtained from several studies and field experiments that were part
of the SMOS mission, and highlight the issues still to be solved
SMOS: a satellite mission to measure ocean surface salinity
International audienceThe ESA's SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) Earth Explorer Opportunity Mission will be launched by 2005. Its baseline payload is a microwave L-band (21 cm, 1.4 GHz) 2D interferometric radiometer, Y shaped, with three arms 4.5 m long. This frequency allows the measurement of brightness temperature (Tb) under the best conditions to retrieve soil moisture and sea surface salinity (SSS). Unlike other oceanographic variables, until now it has not been possible to measure salinity from space. However, large ocean areas lack significant salinity measurements. The 2D interferometer will measure Tb at large and different incidence angles, for two polarizations. It is possible to obtain SSS from L-band passive microwave measurements if the other factors influencing Tb (SST, surface roughness, foam, sun glint, rain, ionospheric effects and galactic/cosmic background radiation) can be accounted for. Since the radiometric sensitivity is low, SSS cannot be recovered to the required accuracy from a single measurement as the error is about 1-2 psu. If the errors contributing to the uncertainty in Tb are random, averaging the independent data and views along the track, and considering a 200 km square, allow the error to be reduced to 0.1-0.2 pus, assuming all ancillary errors are budgeted
The Determination of Surface Salinity with the European SMOS Space Mission
The European Space Agency Soil Moisture and
Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission aims at obtaining global maps of
soil moisture and sea surface salinity from space for large-scale and
climatic studies. It uses an L-band (1400–1427 MHz) Microwave
Interferometric Radiometer by Aperture Synthesis to measure
brightness temperature of the earth’s surface at horizontal and
vertical polarizations ( h and v). These two parameters will be
used together to retrieve the geophysical parameters. The retrieval
of salinity is a complex process that requires the knowledge of
other environmental information and an accurate processing of
the radiometer measurements. Here, we present recent results
obtained from several studies and field experiments that were part
of the SMOS mission, and highlight the issues still to be solved