Contribution to the Improvement of the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) Mission Sea Surface Salinity Retrieval Algorithm
2010
Talone, Marco | Camps, Adriano | Gabarró, Carolina
Memoria de tesis doctoral presentada por Marco Talone para optar al grado de Doctor por la Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), realizada bajo la dirección del Dr. Adriano José Camps Carmona de la Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC) y de la Dra. Carolina Gabarró Prats del Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC).-- 181 pages
Show more [+] Less [-]The European Space Agency's Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) satellite was launched on November, 2, 2009 from the Russian cosmodrome of Plesetsk. Its objective is to globally and regularly collect measurements of Sea Surface Salinity (SSS). To do that, a pioneering instrument has been developed: the Microwave Imaging Radiometer by Aperture Synthesis (MIRAS), the rst space-borne, 2-D interferometric radiometer ever built; it operates at L-band, with a central frequency of 1.4135 GHz, and consists of 69 antennas arranged in a Y shape array. MIRAS' output are brightness temperature maps, from which SSS can be derived through an iterative algorithm, and using auxiliary information. For each overpass of the satel- lite an SSS map is produced, with an estimated accuracy of 1 psu (rmse). According to the Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE) the mission requirement is instead specied as 0.1 psu after averaging in a 10-day and 2º X 2º spatio-temporal boxes. In previuos works ((Sabia et al., 2010), or more extensively in Dr. Sabia's Ph.D. thesis (Sabia, 2008)) the main error sources in retrieving SSS from SMOS measurements were determined as: 1. Scene-dependent bias in the simulated measurements, 2. L-band forward modeling denition, 3. Radiometric sensitivity and accuracy, 4. Constraints in the cost function, and 5. Spatio-temporal averaging. This Ph.D. thesis, is an attempt of reducing part of the aforementioned errors (the relative to the one-overpass SSS (1 - 4)) by a more sophisticated data processing. Firstly, quasi-realistic brightness temperatures have been simulated using the SMOS End-to-end Performance Simulator (SEPS) in its full mode and an ocean model, as provider for geophysical parameters. Using this data set the External Brightness Temperature Calibration technique has been tested to mitigate the scene-dependent bias, while the error introduced by inaccuracies in the L-band forward models has been accounted for by the application of the External Sea Surface Salinity Calibration. Apart from simulated brightness temperatures, both External Brightness Temperature Calibration and External Sea Surface Salinity Calibration have been tested using real synthetic-aperture brightness temperatures, collected by the Helsinki University of Technology HUT-2D radiometer during the SMOS Calibration and Valdation Rehearsal Campaign in August 2007 and on one week of data (in Dual polarization mode) acquired by the SMOS satellite between march 3 and 9, 2010. Finally, a study of the cost function used to derive SSS has been performed: The correlation between measurement mists has been estimated and the eect of including it in the processing have been assessed. As an outcome of a 3-month internship at the Laboratoire LOCEAN in Paris, a theoretical review of the eect of the rain on the very top SSS vertical prole has been carried out and is presented as Appendix
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