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Estimating satellite salinity errors for assimilation of Aquarius and SMOS data into climate models
Author(s) -
Vinogradova Nadya T.,
Ponte Rui M.,
Fukumori Ichiro,
Wang Ou
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1002/2014jc009906
Subject(s) - environmental science , data assimilation , latitude , climatology , satellite , middle latitudes , meteorology , remote sensing , geology , geography , geodesy , aerospace engineering , engineering
Constraining dynamical systems with new information from ocean measurements, including observations of sea surface salinity (SSS) from Aquarius and SMOS, requires careful consideration of data errors that are used to determine the importance of constraints in the optimization. Here such errors are derived by comparing satellite SSS observations from Aquarius and SMOS with ocean model output and in situ data. The associated data error variance maps have a complex spatial pattern, ranging from less than 0.05 in the open ocean to 1–2 (units of salinity variance) along the coasts and high latitude regions. Comparing the data‐model misfits to the data errors indicates that the Aquarius and SMOS constraints could potentially affect estimated SSS values in several ocean regions, including most tropical latitudes. In reference to the Aquarius error budget, derived errors are less than the total allocation errors for the Aquarius mission accuracy requirements in low and midlatitudes, but exceed allocation errors in high latitudes.