Published August 30, 2010 | Version v1
Conference paper Open

Performance of roughness correction models for retrieval of Sea Surface Salinity from air- and satellite-borne L-band radiometers

Description

The recent and imminent launch of the SMOS and Aquarius satellites carrying microwave L-band radiometers provides an opportunity to map Sea Surface Salinity (SSS) globally with an expected error <; 0.2 psu. However, the accuracy of retrieved SSS depends critically on brightness temperature (Tb) corrections for sea surface roughness (SSR) effects. This paper assesses the performance of representative roughness correction models when compared with published data, and applied to recently-acquired airborne L-band radiometer data. One type of model currently being used to process SMOS data combines a wind-driven gravity wave spectrum that describes SSR, with an electromagnetic (EM) model that determines microwave emissivity, to predict the Tb roughness increment relative to the flat sea response. We find that selection of both the spectral and emissivity models strongly influences the resulting (~1 K) Tb errors. We conclude that more accurate modeling of short wavelength spectral components and their EM influence is needed, to reduce these errors to acceptable levels.

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