DocumentCode :
1475723
Title :
Overview of the First SMOS Sea Surface Salinity Products. Part I: Quality Assessment for the Second Half of 2010
Author :
Reul, Nicolas ; Tenerelli, Joseph ; Boutin, Jaqueline ; Chapron, Bertrand ; Paul, Frédéric ; Brion, Emilie ; Gaillard, Fabienne ; Archer, Olivier
Author_Institution :
Lab. d´´Oceanogr. Spatiale, Inst. Francais de Rech. pour l´´Exploitation de la Mer (IFREMER), Plouzane, France
Volume :
50
Issue :
5
fYear :
2012
fDate :
5/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1636
Lastpage :
1647
Abstract :
Multi-angular images of the brightness temperature (TB) of the Earth at 1.4 GHz are reconstructed from the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) satellite sensor data since end 2009. Sea surface salinity (SSS) products remote sensing from space is being attempted using these data over the world oceans. The quality of the first version of the European Space Agency operational Level 2 (L2) SSS swath products is assessed in this paper, using satellite/in situ SSS data match-ups that were collected over the second half of 2010. This database reveals that 95% of the SMOS L2 products show a global error standard deviation on the order of ~ 1.3 practical salinity scale. Simple spatiotemporal aggregation of the L2 products to generate monthly SSS maps at 1° ×1° spatial resolution reduces the error down to about 0.6 globally and 0.4 in the tropics for 90% of the data. Several major problems are, however, detected in the products. Systematically, SMOS SSS data are biased within a ~ 1500 km wide belt along the world coasts and sea ice edges, with a contamination intensity and spread varying from ascending to descending passes. Numerous world ocean areas are permanently or intermittently contaminated by radio-frequency interferences, particularly in the northern high latitudes and following Asia coastlines. Moreover, temporal drifts in the retrieved SSS fields are found with varying signatures in ascending and descending passes. In descending passes, a time-dependent strong latitudinal bias is found, with maximum amplitude reached at the end of the year. Errors in the forward modeling of the wind-induced emissivity and of the sea surface scattered galactic sources are as well identified, biasing the sss retrievals at high and low winds and when the galactic equator sources are reflected toward the sensor.
Keywords :
oceanography; radiofrequency interference; remote sensing; AD 2010; Asia coastline; Earth; European Space Agency operational Level 2; SMOS sea surface salinity product; Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity satellite sensor data; brightness temperature; multiangular images; quality assessment; radiofrequency interferences; spatial resolution; spatiotemporal aggregation; Brightness temperature; Image reconstruction; Ocean temperature; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Spatiotemporal phenomena; L-band; microwave radiometry; ocean salinity; sea surface;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0196-2892
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2012.2188408
Filename :
6172566
Link To Document :
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