Signature of mesoscale eddies in satellite sea surface salinity data

2017 ◽  
Vol 122 (2) ◽  
pp. 1416-1424 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oleg Melnichenko ◽  
Angel Amores ◽  
Nikolai Maximenko ◽  
Peter Hacker ◽  
James Potemra
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-49
Author(s):  
Claude Frankignoul ◽  
Elodie Kestenare ◽  
Gilles Reverdin

AbstractMonthly sea surface salinity (SSS) fields are constructed from observations, using objective mapping on a 1°x1° grid in the Atlantic between 30°S and 50°N in the 1970-2016 period in an update of the data set of Reverdin et al. (2007). Data coverage is heterogeneous, with increased density in 2002 when Argo floats become available, high density along Voluntary Observing Ship lines, and low density south of 10°S. Using lag correlation, the seasonal reemergence of SSS anomalies is investigated between 20°N and 50°N in 5°x5° boxes during the 1993-2016 period, both locally and remotely following the displacements of the deep mixed-layer waters estimated from virtual float trajectories derived from the daily AVISO surface geostrophic currents. Although SSS data are noisy, local SSS reemergence is detected in about half of the boxes, notably in the northeast and southeast, while little reemergence is seen in the central and part of the eastern subtropical gyre. In the same period, sea surface temperature (SST) reemergence is found only slightly more frequently, reflecting the short data duration. However, taking geostrophic advection into account degrades the detection of remote SSS and even SST reemergence. When anomalies are averaged over broader areas, robust evidence of a second and third SSS reemergence peak is found in the northeastern and southeastern parts of the domain, indicating long cold-season persistence of large-scale SSS anomalies, while only a first SST reemergence is seen. An oceanic reanalysis is used to confirm that the correlation analysis indeed reflects the reemergence of subsurface salinity anomalies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Audrey Hasson ◽  
Cori Pegliasco ◽  
Jacqueline Boutin ◽  
Rosemary Morrow

<p>Since 2010, space missions dedicated to Sea Surface Salinity (SSS) have been providing observations with almost complete coverage of the global ocean and a resolution of about 45 km every 3 days. The European Space Agency (ESA) Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission was the first orbiting radiometer to collect regular SSS observations from space. The Aquarius and SMAP (Soil Moisture Active-Passive) missions of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) then reinforced the SSS observing system between mid-2011 and mid-2015 and since mid-2015, respectively.</p><p>Using the most recent SSS Climate Change Initiative project dataset merging data from the 3 missions, this study investigates the SSS signal associated with mesoscale eddies in the Southern Ocean. Eddies location and characteristics are obtained from the daily v3 mesoscale eddy trajectory atlas produced by CLS. SSS anomalies along the eddies journey are computed and compared to Sea Surface Temperature (SST) anomalies (v4 Remote Sensing Systems) as well as the SubAntarctic Front (SAF) position (CTOH, LEGOS). The vertical structure of the eddies is further investigated using profiles from colocated Argo autonomous floats.<span> </span></p><p>This study highlights a robust signal in SSS depending on both the eddies rotation (cyclone/anticyclone) and latitudinal position with respect to the SAF. Moreover, this dependence is not found in SST. These observations reveal oceanic the interaction of eddies with the larger scale ocean water masses. SSS and SST anomalies composites indeed show different patterns either bi-poles linked with horizontal stirring of fronts, mono-poles from trapping water or vertical mixing changes, or a mix of the two.</p><p>This analysis gives strong hints for the erosion of subsurface waters, such as mode waters, induced by enhanced mixing caused by the deep-reaching eddies of the southern ocean.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 4600
Author(s):  
Sébastien Guimbard ◽  
Nicolas Reul ◽  
Roberto Sabia ◽  
Sylvain Herlédan ◽  
Ziad El Khoury Hanna ◽  
...  

The Pilot-Mission Exploitation Platform (Pi-MEP) for salinity is an ESA initiative originally meant to support and widen the uptake of Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission data over the ocean. Starting in 2017, the project aims at setting up a computational web-based platform focusing on satellite sea surface salinity data, supporting studies on enhanced validation and scientific process over the ocean. It has been designed in close collaboration with a dedicated science advisory group in order to achieve three main objectives: gathering all the data required to exploit satellite sea surface salinity data, systematically producing a wide range of metrics for comparing and monitoring sea surface salinity products’ quality, and providing user-friendly tools to explore, visualize and exploit both the collected products and the results of the automated analyses. The Salinity Pi-MEP is becoming a reference hub for the validation of satellite sea surface salinity missions by providing valuable information on satellite products (SMOS, Aquarius, SMAP), an extensive in situ database (e.g., Argo, thermosalinographs, moorings, drifters) and additional thematic datasets (precipitation, evaporation, currents, sea level anomalies, sea surface temperature, etc.). Co-localized databases between satellite products and in situ datasets are systematically generated together with validation analysis reports for 30 predefined regions. The data and reports are made fully accessible through the web interface of the platform. The datasets, validation metrics and tools (automatic, user-driven) of the platform are described in detail in this paper. Several dedicated scienctific case studies involving satellite SSS data are also systematically monitored by the platform, including major river plumes, mesoscale signatures in boundary currents, high latitudes, semi-enclosed seas, and the high-precipitation region of the eastern tropical Pacific. Since 2019, a partnership in the Salinity Pi-MEP project has been agreed between ESA and NASA to enlarge focus to encompass the entire set of satellite salinity sensors. The two agencies are now working together to widen the platform features on several technical aspects, such as triple-collocation software implementation, additional match-up collocation criteria and sustained exploitation of data from the SPURS campaigns.


2016 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 137-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aida Alvera-Azcárate ◽  
Alexander Barth ◽  
Gaëlle Parard ◽  
Jean-Marie Beckers

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberto Sabia ◽  
Sebastien Guimbard ◽  
Nicolas Reul ◽  
Tony Lee ◽  
Julian Schanze ◽  
...  

<p>The Pilot Mission Exploitation Platform (Pi-MEP) for Salinity (www.salinity-pimep.org) has been released operationally in 2019 to the broad oceanographic community, in order to foster satellite sea surface salinity validation and exploitation activities.</p><p>Specifically, the Platform aims at enhancing salinityvalidation, by allowing systematic inter-comparison of various EO datasets with a broad suite of in-situ data, and also at enabling oceanographic process studies by capitalizing on salinity data in synergy with additional spaceborne estimates.</p><p> </p><p>Despite Pi-MEP was originally conceived as an ESA initiative to widen the uptake of the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission data over ocean, a project partnership with NASA was devised soon after the operational deployment, and an official collaboration endorsed within the ESA-NASA Joint Program Planning Group (JPPG).</p><p> </p><p>The Salinity Pi-MEP has therefore become a reference hub for SMOS, SMAP and Aquarius satellite salinity missions, which are assessed in synergy with additional thematic datasets (e.g., precipitation, evaporation, currents, sea level anomalies, ocean color, sea surface temperature). </p><p>Match-up databases of satellite/in situ (such as Argo, TSG, moorings, drifters) data and corresponding validation reports at different spatiotemporal scales are systematically generated; furthermore, recently-developed dedicated tools allow data visualization, metrics computation and user-driven features extractions.</p><p> </p><p>The Platform is also meant to monitor salinity in selected oceanographic “case studies”, ranging from river plumes monitoring to SSS characterization in challenging regions, such as high latitudes or semi-enclosed basins.</p><p> </p><p>The two Agencies are currently collaborating to widen the Platform features on several technical aspects - ranging from a triple-collocation software implementation to a sustained exploitation of data from the SPURS-1/2 campaigns. In this context, an upgrade of the satellite/in-situ match-up methodology has been recently agreed, resulting into a redefinition of the validation criteria that will be subsequently implemented in the Platform.</p><p> </p><p>A further synthesis of the three satellites salinity algorithms, models and auxiliary data handling is at the core of the ESA Climate Change Initiative (CCI) on Salinity and of ESA-NASA further collaboration.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 1341 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hsun-Ying Kao ◽  
Gary Lagerloef ◽  
Tong Lee ◽  
Oleg Melnichenko ◽  
Thomas Meissner ◽  
...  

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.


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