Comparison of GRACE Level-3 Data with Super Conducting Gravimeters in Europe By Means of Signal Decomposition Analysis

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Angel Izquierdo Perez ◽  
Christian Voigt ◽  
Elmas Sinem Ince ◽  
Frank Flechtner

<p>With the launch of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission in 2002 and continued with GRACE Follow-on (GRACE-FO) since 2018, it is nowadays possible to monitor important mass variations in the Earth system. Nevertheless, validating these observations is a challenging task due to the lack of alternative methods to obtain directly comparable in-situ measurements. The most appropriate approach for this endeavor consists of comparing the GRACE derived Total Water Storage (TWS) residuals against Superconducting Gravimeter (SG) residuals, which provide long term stability.</p> <p>The in-situ data used for this project are the gravity residuals obtained after removing the effects of solid Earth tides and ocean tidal loading, atmospheric loading, instrumental drift, polar motion and length‐of‐day induced gravity changes, from nine SG stations between January 2010 and March 2017. Such residuals were then compared with GRACE retrieved TWS residuals obtained from the Gravity Information System (GravIS) portal (gravis.gfz-potsdam.de).</p> <p>In this project, three decomposition methods were used for the comparisons: Principal Component Analysis (PCA), Spatiotemporal Independent Component Analysis (stICA) and Multivariate Singular Spectral Analysis (MSSA). The main aim was to assess the impact of the GRACE data corrections applied by GravIS to the coefficient C20, the coefficients of degree/order one, and the Glacial Isostatic Adjustment (GIA) effect. Moreover, the Gaussian, DDK and VDK filtering techniques were evaluated as well.</p> <p>The tested methods proved to cope with the residual hydrological effects on SG measurements up to an extend that allows an objective evaluation of the data. The results obtained from this analysis indicate that the most optimal solution is achieved by correcting the C20 and degree/order 1 coefficients. The most effective filters are DDK1, VDK2 and Gaussian with a 500 km bandwidth, in that order. Furthermore, the GIA correction demonstrates to be relevant for northern locations like Onsala.</p> <p>Concerning the decomposition methods, MSSA demonstrates to be a powerful tool, synthesizing the most important common trends among the in-situ measurements of different stations, and displaying the local differences of the signals. The common signals extracted from PCA represent a good overview of the trends from the data but is not detailed at the individual locations. Finally, the stICA decomposition is not able to extract these common signals when the input data is significantly different across the individual variables for SG data. This is explained by the Blind Source Separation (BSS) nature of the methodology, which intends to identify differences among the signals, and is not useful in this case where the signals are affected by the local hydrology.</p> <p>The importance of this study lies in the versatility that the successfully tested methods show for the purpose of GRACE data comparison. Furthermore, the methodology applied in this project can be extended to analyze the current GRACE-FO mission as well other gravimetric satellite missions in the future.</p>

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 1927
Author(s):  
Fuqin Li ◽  
David Jupp ◽  
Thomas Schroeder ◽  
Stephen Sagar ◽  
Joshua Sixsmith ◽  
...  

An atmospheric correction algorithm for medium-resolution satellite data over general water surfaces (open/coastal, estuarine and inland waters) has been assessed in Australian coastal waters. In situ measurements at four match-up sites were used with 21 Landsat 8 images acquired between 2014 and 2017. Three aerosol sources (AERONET, MODIS ocean aerosol and climatology) were used to test the impact of the selection of aerosol optical depth (AOD) and Ångström coefficient on the retrieved accuracy. The initial results showed that the satellite-derived water-leaving reflectance can have good agreement with the in situ measurements, provided that the sun glint is handled effectively. Although the AERONET aerosol data performed best, the contemporary satellite-derived aerosol information from MODIS or an aerosol climatology could also be as effective, and should be assessed with further in situ measurements. Two sun glint correction strategies were assessed for their ability to remove the glint bias. The most successful one used the average of two shortwave infrared (SWIR) bands to represent sun glint and subtracted it from each band. Using this sun glint correction method, the mean all-band error of the retrieved water-leaving reflectance at the Lucinda Jetty Coastal Observatory (LJCO) in north east Australia was close to 4% and unbiased over 14 acquisitions. A persistent bias in the other strategy was likely due to the sky radiance being non-uniform for the selected images. In regard to future options for an operational sun glint correction, the simple method may be sufficient for clear skies until a physically based method has been established.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda T. Nylund ◽  
Rickard Bensow ◽  
Mattias Liefvendahl ◽  
Arash Eslamdoost ◽  
Anders Tengberg ◽  
...  

<p>This interdisciplinary study with implications for fate and transport of pollutants from shipping, investigates the previously overlooked phenomenon of ship induced mixing. When a ship moves through water, the hull and propeller induce a long-lasting turbulent wake. Natural waters are usually stratified, and the stratification influences both the vertical and horizontal extent of the wake. The altered turbulent regime in shipping lanes governs the distribution of discharged pollutants, e.g. PAHs, metals, nutrients and non-indigenous species. The ship related pollutant load follows the trend in volumes of maritime trade, which has almost tripled since the 1980s. In heavily trafficked areas there may be one ship passage every ten minutes; today shipping constitutes a significant source of pollution.</p><p>To understand the environmental impact of shipping related pollutants, it is essential to know their fate following regional scale transport. However, previous modelling efforts assuming discharge at the surface will not adequately reflect the input values in the regional models. Therefore, it is urgent to bridge the gaps between the spatiotemporal scales from high-resolution numerical modeling of the flow hydrodynamics around the ship, mixing processes and interaction of the ship and wake with stratification, and parameterization in regional oceanographic modeling. Here this knowledge gap is addressed by combining an array of methods; in situ measurements, remote sensing and numerical flow modeling.</p><p>A bottom-mounted Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler was placed under a ship lane, for <em>in-situ</em> measurements of the vertical and temporal expansion of turbulent wakes. In addition, <em>ex-situ</em> measurements with Landsat 8 Thermal Infrared Sensor were used to estimate the longevity and spatial extent of the thermal signal from ship wakes. The computational modelling was conducted using well resolved 3D RANS modelling for the hull and the near wake (up to five ship lengths aft), a method typically used for the near wake behaviour in analysing the propulsion system. As this is not feasible to use for a far wake analysis, the predicted wake is then used as input for a 2D+time modelling for the sustained wake up to 30min after the ship passage. These results, both from measurements and numerical models, are then combined to analyse how ship-induced turbulence influence at what depth discharged pollutants will be found.</p><p>This first step to cover the mesoscales of the turbulent ship wake is necessary to assess the impact of ship related pollution. In-situ measurements show median wake depth 13.5m (max 31.5m) and median longevity 10min (max 29min). Satellite data show median thermal wake signal 13.7km (max 62.5km). A detailed simulation model will only be possible to use for the first few 100m of the ship wake, but the coupling to a simplified 2D+time modelling shows a promising potential to bridge our understanding of the impact of the ship wake on the larger scales. Our model results indicate that the natural stratification affects the distribution and retention of pollutants in the wake region. The depth of discharge and the wake turbulence characteristics will in turn affect the fate and transport of pollutants on larger spatiotemporal scales.</p>


Hydrobiologia ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 517 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 171-177
Author(s):  
Steven W. Effler ◽  
David M. O'Donnell ◽  
MaryGail Perkins ◽  
David G. Smith

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leqiang Sun ◽  
Stéphane Belair ◽  
Marco Carrera ◽  
Bernard Bilodeau

<p>Canadian Space Agency (CSA) has recently started receiving and processing the images from the recently launched C-band RADARSAT Constellation Mission (RCM). The backscatter and soil moisture retrievals products from the previously launched RADARSAT-2 agree well with both in-situ measurements and surface soil moisture modeled with land surface model Soil, Vegetation, and Snow (SVS). RCM will provide those products at an even better spatial coverage and temporal resolution. In preparation of the potential operational application of RCM products in Canadian Meteorological Center (CMC), this paper presents the scenarios of assimilating either soil moisture retrieval or outright backscatter signal in a 100-meter resolution version of the Canadian Land Data Assimilation System (CaLDAS) on field scale with time interval of three hours. The soil moisture retrieval map was synthesized by extrapolating the regression relationship between in-situ measurements and open loop model output based on soil texture lookup table. Based on this, the backscatter map was then generated with the surface roughness retrieved from RADARSAT-2 images using a modified Integral Equation Model (IEM) model. Bias correction was applied to the Ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) to mitigate the impact of nonlinear errors introduced by multi-sourced perturbations. Initial results show that the assimilation of backscatter is as effective as assimilating soil moisture retrievals. Compared to open loop, both can improve the analysis of surface moisture, particularly in terms of reducing bias.  </p>


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Tangdamrongsub ◽  
S. C. Steele-Dunne ◽  
B. C. Gunter ◽  
P. G. Ditmar ◽  
E. H. Sutanudjaja ◽  
...  

Abstract. An accurate estimation of water resources dynamics is crucial for proper management of both agriculture and the local ecology, particularly in semi-arid regions. Imperfections in model physics, uncertainties in model land parameters and meteorological data, as well as the human impact on land changes often limit the accuracy of hydrological models in estimating water storages. To mitigate this problem, this study investigated the assimilation of Terrestrial Water Storage (TWS) estimates derived from the Gravity Recovery And Climate Experiment (GRACE) data using an Ensemble Kalman Filter (EnKF) approach. The region considered was the Hexi Corridor of Northern China. The hydrological model used for the analysis was PCR-GLOBWB, driven by satellite-based forcing data from April 2002 to December 2010. In this study, EnKF 3D scheme, which accounts for the GRACE spatially-correlated errors, was used. The correlated errors were propagated from the full error variance-covariance matrices provided as a part of the GRACE data product. The impact of the GRACE Data Assimilation (DA) scheme was evaluated in terms of the TWS, as well as individual hydrological storage estimates. The capability of GRACE DA to adjust the storage level was apparent not only for the entire TWS but also for the groundwater component, which had annual amplitude, phase, and long-term trend estimates closer to the GRACE observations. This study also assessed the benefits of taking into account correlations of errors in GRACE-based estimates. The assessment was carried out by comparing the EnKF results, with and without taking into account error correlations, with the in situ groundwater data from 5 well sites and the in situ streamflow data from two river gauges. On average, the experiments showed that GRACE DA improved the accuracy of groundwater storage estimates by as much as 25 %. The inclusion of error correlations provided an equal or greater improvement in the estimates. No significant benefits of GRACE DA were observed in terms of streamflow estimates, which reflect a limited spatial and temporal resolution of GRACE observations. Results from the 9-year long GRACE DA study were used to assess the status of water resources over the Hexi Corridor. Areally-averaged values revealed that TWS, soil moisture, and groundwater storages over the region decreased with an average rate of approximately 0.2, 0.1, and 0.1 cm/yr in terms of equivalent water heights, respectively. A substantial decline in TWS (approximately −0.4 cm/yr) was seen over the Shiyang River Basin in particular, and the reduction mostly occurred in the groundwater layer. An investigation of the relationship between water resources and agriculture suggested that groundwater consumption required to maintain the growing period in this specific basin was likely the cause of the groundwater depletion.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (8) ◽  
pp. 1900
Author(s):  
Cong Yin ◽  
Ernesto Lopez-Baeza ◽  
Manuel Martin-Neira ◽  
Roberto Fernandez-Moran ◽  
Lei Yang ◽  
...  

In this paper, the SOMOSTA (Soil Moisture Monitoring Station) experiment on the intercomparison of soil moisture monitoring from Global Navigation Satellite System Reflectometry (GNSS-R) signals and passive L-band microwave radiometer observations at the Valencia Anchor Station is introduced. The GNSS-R instrument has an up-looking antenna for receiving direct signals from satellites, and a dual-pol down-looking antenna for receiving LHCP (left-hand circular polarization) and RHCP (right-hand circular polarization) reflected signals from the soil surface. Data were collected from the three different antennas through the two channels of Oceanpal GNSS-R receiver and, in addition, calibration was performed to reduce the impact from the differing channels. Reflectivity was thus measured, and soil moisture could be retrieved. The ESA (European Space Agency)-funded ELBARA-II (ESA L Band Radiometer II) is an L-band radiometer with two channels with 11 MHz bandwidth and respective center frequencies of 1407.5 MHz and 1419.5 MHz. The ELBARAII antenna is a large dual-mode Picket horn that is 1.4 m wide, with a length of 2.7 m with −3 dB full beam width of 12° (±6° around the antenna main direction) and a gain of 23.5 dB. By comparing GNSS-R and ELBARA-II radiometer data, a high correlation was found between the LHCP reflectivity measured by GNSS-R and the horizontal/vertical reflectivity from the radiometer (with correlation coefficients ranging from 0.83 to 0.91). Neural net fitting was used for GNSS-R soil moisture inversion, and the RMSE (Root Mean Square Error) was 0.014 m3/m3. The determination coefficient between the retrieved soil moisture and in situ measurements was R2 = 0.90 for Oceanpal and R2 = 0.65 for Elbara II, and the ubRMSE (Unbiased RMSE) were 0.0128 and 0.0734 respectively. The soil moisture retrievals by both L-band remote sensing methods show good agreement with each other, and their mutual correspondence with in-situ measurements and with rainfall was also good.


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