Contributing to the validation of SMOS ocean surface salinity
Lead Research Organisation:
NATIONAL OCEANOGRAPHY CENTRE
Department Name: NERC Strategic Research Division
Abstract
In 2008, the European Space Agency (ESA) will launch the first-ever satellite to measure ocean salinity from space: the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission. SMOS aims to deliver global maps of the hitherto poorly known sea surface salinity (SSS), especially its temporal and large scale spatial variability. Such measurements are critical for ocean circulation and climate research and to improve operational forecasts. This project seeks to contribute to the assessment of the quality of the SMOS products in the period preceeding and immediatly following the launch of the SMOS satellite in 2008. This work is the key element of the UK involvement in the international effort of SMOS salinity data validation coordinated by ESA. Financial support for satellite validation activities is not available from ESA and is expected to originate from national agencies. However, it has so far not been possible to secure funding for this Cal/Val work, which is notoriously difficult to get funded in the UK.
Publications
Angiuli Luciana
(2013)
On the Dirichlet and Neumann evolution operators in R^d_+
in arXiv e-prints
Banks C
(2012)
Validating SMOS Ocean Surface Salinity in the Atlantic With Argo and Operational Ocean Model Data
in IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
Cheng IC
(2014)
Note: A method for minimizing oxide formation during elevated temperature nanoindentation.
in The Review of scientific instruments
Gurumoorthy Karthik S.
(2011)
Distance Transform Gradient Density Estimation using the Stationary Phase Approximation
in arXiv e-prints
Huang X
(2011)
A Miniature, High Precision Conductivity and Temperature Sensor System for Ocean Monitoring
in IEEE Sensors Journal
Korenaga J.
(2012)
Localization of geoid anomalies and the evolution of oceanic lithosphere: A case study from the Mendocino Fracture Zone
in AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
Okawa Shinnosuke
(2011)
On images of Mori dream spaces
in arXiv e-prints
Tzortzi E
(2013)
Tropical Atlantic salinity variability: New insights from SMOS
in Geophysical Research Letters