Title :
Passive microwave observation spatial biases and uncertainty induced by sea-surface salinity
Author_Institution :
Center for Satellite Applic. & Res. (STAR), NOAA / NESDIS, Camp Springs, MD, USA
Abstract :
Using in situ sea-surface salinity (SSS) climatology for passive microwave ocean surface emissivity calculations introduces biases resulting from climatology observations that are very sparse in space and time. Newly available satellite SSS measurements provide the means to examine the significance and global distribution of these biases, as well as the significance of data uncertainty to passive microwave retrievals. This study explores the biases and uncertainty of Level-3 SSS data from the Soil Moisture-Ocean Salinity (SMOS) Barcelona Expert Centre (BEC) with respect to climatology and relates them to passive microwave significance in terms of surface brightness temperature.
Keywords :
microwave measurement; oceanographic techniques; remote sensing; seawater; SMOS BEC; SMOS Barcelona Expert Centre; SSS climatology; Soil Moisture Ocean Salinity mission; bias global distribution; bias significance; climatology observations; data uncertainty significance; ocean surface emissivity calculations; passive microwave observation spatial biases; passive microwave observation uncertainty; sea surface salinity; surface brightness temperature; Brightness temperature; Microwave radiometry; Ocean temperature; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Uncertainty; geophysical measurements; ocean salinity; passive microwave remote sensing;
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS 2011
Conference_Location :
Waikoloa, HI
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1427-6