EGU2020-7545
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-7545
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

CATDS CEC-LOCEAN debiased version 4 Sea Surface Salinity

Clovis Thouvenin-Masson1, Jacqueline Boutin1, Jean-Luc Vergely2, Dimitry Khvorostyanov1, and Stéphane Tarot3
Clovis Thouvenin-Masson et al.
  • 1CNRS, Sorbonne université, LOCEAN/IPSL, Paris, France
  • 2ACRI-ST, Guyancourt, France
  • 3IFREMER, Plouzané, France

The Centre Aval de Traitement des Données SMOS (CATDS), developped by the CNES in collaboration with the CESBIO and IFREMER, produces and continuously improves SMOS sea surface salinity (SSS) products.

The aim of this poster is to present the last version of CATDS L3 products developed by the LOCEAN CATDS Expertise Center (CEC-LOCEAN debiased v4, https://www.catds.fr/Products/Available-products-from-CEC-OS/CEC-Locean-L3-Debiased-v4), and to highlight its main improvements with respect to previous version 3.

The L3 products are available for 9-day and 18-day Gaussian averaging. Both versions 3 and 4 contain a bias correction based on internal consistency of SMOS SSS retrieved in various locations across swath, and on seasonal variability of salinity. The main evolutions of version 4 consist in refining the absolute correction methodology, limiting wind speed to 16m/s, add a refined filtering for sea ice and radio frequency contamination based on SMOS retrieved pseudo dielectric constant, the so-called ACARD (Waldteufel et al. 2004) and an improved sea surface temperature (SST) correction in cold waters based on Dinnat et al. (2019) observed dependency.

Improvements with respect to version 3 are assessed through systematic validation that consists in two main stages: (1) Comparison with respect to in-situ measurements (repetitive ship transects across Atlantic and Arctic regions, and Prediction and Research Moored Array in the Tropical Atlantic (PIRATA) moorings); (2) Comparison with the In-Situ Analysis System (ISAS) monthly fields (Kolodziejczyk, 2017), in terms of both mean spatial maps and time series of key statistics parameters. The key statistics parameters are computed both over the global ocean and for individual areas of interest. Thus, both the mean spatial patterns and temporal variability in various regions are evaluated.

Comparisons between the two last versions exposed in this poster are based on relevant examples from this systematic validation: main improvements are observed in high latitudes (over 45° latitude).In the Southern Ocean modification of wind speed filtering and SST correction lead to a decrease in the mean difference between SMOS  and ISAS SSS south of 45S from 0.16+/-0.07 to 0.02+/-0.05pss. Std of the differences and r2 are also improved over global ocean. Statistics obtained with this new version are close to the ones obtained with SMAP RemSS v4 SSS.

 

Dinnat, E.P.; Le Vine, D.M.; Boutin, J.; Meissner, T.; Lagerloef, G. Remote Sensing of Sea Surface Salinity: Comparison of Satellite and In Situ Observations and Impact of Retrieval Parameters. Remote Sens. 2019, 11, 750.

Kolodziejczyk Nicolas, Prigent-Mazella Annaig, Gaillard Fabienne (2017). ISAS-15 temperature and salinity gridded fields. SEANOE. https://doi.org/10.17882/52367

Waldteufel, P., J. L. Vergely, and C. Cot, A modified cardioid model for Processing multiangular radiometric observations, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, vol.42, issue.5, pp.1059-1063, 2004. DOI : 10.1109/TGRS.2003.821698.

How to cite: Thouvenin-Masson, C., Boutin, J., Vergely, J.-L., Khvorostyanov, D., and Tarot, S.: CATDS CEC-LOCEAN debiased version 4 Sea Surface Salinity, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-7545, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-7545, 2020

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