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Title
  • en Evaluation of sea-surface salinity observed by Aquarius
Creator
Accessrights open access
Rights
  • en Copyright 2014 American Geophysical Union.
Subject
  • Other en satellite remote sensing
  • Other en sea-surface salinity
  • Other en Aquarius
  • Other en microwave radiometer
  • Other en global water cycle
  • Other en air-sea interaction
  • NDC 452
Description
  • Abstract en Sea-surface salinity (SSS) observed by Aquarius was compared with global observations from Argo floats and offshore moored buoys to evaluate the quality of satellite SSS data and to assess error structures. Aquarius products retrieved by different algorithms (Aquarius Official Release version 3.0 [V3.0], Combined Active-Passive [CAP] algorithm version 3.0, and Remote Sensing Systems test bed algorithm version 3) were compared. The Aquarius SSS was in good agreement with in situ salinity measurements for all three products. Root-mean-square (rms) differences of the salinity residual, with respect to Argo salinity, ranged from 0.41 to 0.52 psu. These three Aquarius products exhibit high SSS deviation from Argo salinity under lower sea-surface temperature conditions (<10 degrees C) due to lower sensitivity of microwave emissivity to SSS. The CAP product deviates under strong wind conditions (>10 m s(-1)), probably due to model bias and uncertainty associated with sea-surface roughness. Furthermore, significant SSS differences between ascending (south-to-north) and descending (north-to-south) paths were detected. The monthly averaged Aquarius SSS (1 degrees x 1 degrees grid) was also compared with outputs from the ocean data optimal interpolation (OI) system operated by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science Technology (JAMSTEC) and the ocean data assimilation system used by the Meteorological Research Institute, Japan Meteorological Agency (MRI/JMA). Negative bias, attributed to near-surface salinity stratification by precipitation, was detected in tropical regions. For 40 degrees S-40 degrees N, rms difference, with respect to JAMSTEC OI, is 0.27 psu for the V3.0, while the CAP product rms difference is only 0.22 psu, which is close to the Aquarius mission goal. Key Points <list id="jgrc20976-list-0001" list-type="bulleted"> <list-item id="jgrc20976-li-0001">Sea-surface salinity (SSS) observed by Aquarius was evaluated using in situ data <list-item id="jgrc20976-li-0002">SSS retrieved by three different algorithms were compared with each other <list-item id="jgrc20976-li-0003">Error structure of the retrieved SSS was characterized by residual analyses
Publisher en American Geophysical Union
Date
    Issued2014-11
Language
  • eng
Resource Type journal article
Version Type VoR
Identifier HDL http://hdl.handle.net/2115/59112
Relation
  • isIdenticalTo DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/2014JC010094
Journal
    • PISSN 2169-9275
      • en Journal of geophysical research : oceans
      • Volume Number119 Issue Number11 Page Start8109 Page End8121
File
Oaidate 2023-07-26