Title :
Application of the AQ rain accumulation product for investigation of rain effects on AQ Sea Surface Salinity measurements
Author :
Santos-Garcia, Andrea ; Ebrahimi, Hamideh ; Hejazin, Yazan ; Jacob, Minu M. ; Jones, Lewis ; Asher, William E.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of EECS, Univ. of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA
Abstract :
Sea Surface Salinity (SSS) is a tracer of the ocean circulation and fresh water exchange, between ocean and atmosphere. Hence, it provides vital information to be able to understand how the Earth´s hydrological cycle responds to climate change. An analysis of the Aquarius (AQ) Sea Surface Salinity retrievals reveals that the spatial patterns of reduced SSS are correlated with the spatial distribution of rainfall. Therefore, it is important to understand the SSS changes due to seawater dilution by rain, and the associated near-surface salinity stratification. This paper focuses on the effects produced by rainfall on the AQ SSS retrieval, using a macro-scale rain impact model (RIM). This model is based on the superposition of a one-dimension, empirical, transient, near-surface salinity stratification profile model that relates the surface salinity to depth, rain accumulation and time since rainfall. Also, an AQ Rain Accumulation (AQ RA) product (based on CMORPH - CPC Morphing technique - global precipitation dataset), that provides the rainfall history for 24 hours (in half hour intervals) prior to the observation time and each AQ measurement cell is presented. This AQ RA product facilitates the identification of instantaneous rain and prior rainfall accumulations, which will aid in the investigation of rainfall effects on the SSS measurements. In this paper, RIM was validated by comparing measured and simulated AQ SSS for two months of 2012 in the Pacific Ocean over the ITCZ (Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone). Results are presented showing the high cross-correlation for the comparison between simulated SSS and retrieved SSS.
Keywords :
climatology; oceanographic regions; rain; salinity (geophysical); seawater; 1D empirical transient near-surface salinity stratification profile model; AQ SSS retrieval; AQ measurement cell; AQ rain accumulation product; AQ sea surface salinity measurements; Aquarius sea surface salinity retrievals; CMORPH CPC morphing technique; Earth hydrological cycle; ITCZ; Pacific Ocean; climate change; fresh water exchange; global precipitation dataset; high cross-correlation; instantaneous rain; intertropical convergence zone; macroscale rain impact model; near-surface salinity stratification; observation time; ocean circulation; rainfall effects; rainfall history; rainfall spatial distribution; reduced sea surface salinity; seawater dilution; simulated sea surface salinity; spatial patterns; Microwave radiometry; Ocean temperature; Rain; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Aquarius; dilution; rain; rain accumulation; salinity stratification;
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
DOI :
10.1109/MicroRad.2014.6878911