Title :
A method for estimating sea surface nitrate concentrations from remotely sensed SST and chlorophyll a-a case study for the north Pacific Ocean using OCTS/ADEOS data
Author :
Goes, Joaquim I. ; Saino, Toshiro ; Oaku, Hiromi ; Jiang, Ding Long
Author_Institution :
Inst. for Hydrospheric & Atmos. Sci., Nagoya Univ., Japan
fDate :
5/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Proposes a method to estimate sea surface nitrate (N) from space using satellite measurements of sea surface temperature (SST) and chlorophyll a (chl a). The procedure relies on empirical relationships between shipboard measurements of N and its predictor variables, temperature (T) and chl a in surface and near surface waters. Although N appears to be controlled primarily by T, the addition of the biological variable chl a helps improve N prediction by reducing local and regional differences in the character of the temperature-nitrate (T-N) relationship. The authors have applied these empirical algorithms to SST and chl a data from the Ocean Color and Temperature Scanner (OCTS) on board the Advanced Earth Observation Satellite (ADEOS). The results clearly suggest that measurements of SST and chl a now possible by modern-day ocean satellites could be exploited usefully to extend the resolution of shipboard N measurements over large spatial and temporal scales. Systematic errors in estimates of N that could result from errors in satellite estimates of SST and chl a are examined through sensitivity analyses
Keywords :
nitrogen compounds; oceanographic regions; oceanographic techniques; organic compounds; remote sensing; spectral methods of temperature measurement; ADEOS; Advanced Earth Observation Satellite; N Pacific Ocean; OCTS; Ocean Color and Temperature Scanner; biological variable; chlorophyll-a; estimation method; near surface waters; ocean satellites; remotely sensed SST; satellite measurements; sea surface nitrate concentrations; sea surface temperature; sensitivity analyses; shipboard measurements; systematic errors; temperature-nitrate relationship; Artificial satellites; Biological control systems; Extraterrestrial measurements; Nitrogen; Ocean temperature; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Spatial resolution; Temperature control; Temperature sensors;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on