DocumentCode
1785010
Title
Inter-comparison of SMOS and aquarius Sea Surface Salinity: Effects of the dielectric constant and vicarious calibration
Author
Dinnat, E.P. ; Boutin, J. ; Yin, X. ; Le Vine, D.M.
Author_Institution
NASA-Goddard Space Flight Center, Chapman Univ., Greenbelt, MD, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
24-27 March 2014
Firstpage
55
Lastpage
60
Abstract
Two spaceborne instruments share the scientific objective of mapping the global Sea Surface Salinity (SSS). ESA´s Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) and NASA´s Aquarius use L-band (1.4 GHz) radiometry to retrieve SSS. We find that SSS retrieved by SMOS is generally lower than SSS retrieved by Aquarius, except for very cold waters where SMOS SSS is higher overall. The spatial distribution of the differences in SSS is similar to the distribution of sea surface temperature. There are several differences in the retrieval algorithm that could explain the observed SSS differences. We assess the impact of the dielectric constant model and the ancillary sea surface salinity used by both missions for calibrating the radiometers and retrieving SSS. The differences in dielectric constant model produce differences in SSS of the order of 0.3 psu and exhibit a dependence on latitude and temperature. We use comparisons with the Argo in situ data to assess the performances of the model in various regions of the globe. Finally, the differences in the ancillary sea surface salinity products used to perform the vicarious calibration of both instruments are relatively small (0.1 psu), but not negligible considering the requirements for spaceborne remote sensing of SSS.
Keywords
ocean temperature; oceanographic techniques; remote sensing; salinity (geophysical); Aquarius sea surface salinity; L-band radiometry; SMOS sea surface salinity; ancillary sea surface salinity products; dielectric constant effects; dielectric constant model; frequency 1.4 GHz; sea surface temperature; vicarious calibration; Calibration; Computational modeling; Data models; Dielectric constant; Ocean temperature; Sea measurements; Aquarius; L-band; SMOS; calibration; dielectric constant; radiometry; sea surface salinity;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Microwave Radiometry and Remote Sensing of the Environment (MicroRad), 2014 13th Specialist Meeting on
Conference_Location
Pasadena, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-4645-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MicroRad.2014.6878907
Filename
6878907
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