DocumentCode
2823732
Title
Ocean tide measurement by seasat altimeter data
Author
Brown, Rebecca
Author_Institution
Phoenix Corporation, McLean, VA, USA
fYear
1982
fDate
20-22 Sept. 1982
Firstpage
439
Lastpage
444
Abstract
Tides in the deep ocean have been measured directly by satellite altimetry, independent of knowledge of earth tides, ocean loading, tidal dissipation, or ocean bottom topography. Conventional tide predictions for the deep ocean are sensitive to uncertainties in these parameters. Correction of Seasat altimetry for orbit uncertainty, and subsequent harmonic analysis of sub-track crossover differences, provides a simple and direct measure of the ocean tide. Comparison of M2 altimetric tide parameters at 11 locations in the northeast Pacific with those determined from bottom pressure gauges shows fair agreement at 5 locations, but puzzling systematic differences at the other locations. The estimated precision of the altimeter solutions is 8 cm in amplitude and 10 degrees in phase angle.
Keywords
Altimetry; Earth; Extraterrestrial measurements; Harmonic analysis; Oceans; Pressure gauges; Satellites; Sea measurements; Surfaces; Tides;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS 82
Conference_Location
Washington, DC, USA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.1982.1151872
Filename
1151872
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