|
All passes from all NOAA AVHRR satellite passes collected since September 1993 are available, including all nighttime and daytime passes starting with the AVHRR on the NOAA 11 satellite. SST was computed using the multi-channel sea-surface temperature (MCSST) algorithm developed by McClain et al. (1985; see also McClain et al., 1983; Strong and McClain, 1984; Walton, 1988; Wick et al., 1992). The approximate root mean square (rms) error of the AVHRR SST retrievals, confirmed by our lab through comparisons with in situ data, is of the order of 0.5 degrees C (see also Brown, 1985; Minnett, 1991). All SST fields are mapped to a Cylindrical Equidistant projection, according to the coordinates shown in Table 1 below. Note however, that radiometers sense radiation emitted from the upper few micrometers of the ocean only (Grassl, 1976). This "skin" is the top of the millimeter-thin molecular boundary layer that transports heat from a turbulent ocean below to a turbulent atmosphere above (Wick et al., 1992). There can be considerable differences between the skin temperature and the bulk temperature of sea water (Schluessel et al, 1987; Schluessel et al, 1990), and mass flux by evaporation and radiative cooling, i.e. processes that act strongly on daily and seasonal scales, lead to considerable differences (Maul, 1985, page 186). This effect therefore may mask variability in the depth dimension.
References: Brown, O. B., J. W. Brown, and R. H. Evans. 1985. Calibration of advanced very high resolution radiometer infrared observations. J. Geophysical Research. 90. 11667-11678. Grassl, H. 1976. The dependence of the measured cool skin of the ocean on wind stress and total heat flux. Boundary Layer Met. 10. 465-474. Maul, G. A. 1985. Introduction to satellite oceanography. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. 606 p. McClain, E. P., W. G. Pichel, C. C. Walton, Z. Ahmad, and J. Sutton, Multi-channel improvements to satellite-derived global sea-surface temperatures, Adv. Space Res, 2(6), 43-47, 1983. Minnett, P. J. 1991. Consequences of sea surface temperature variability on the validation and applications of satellite measurements. Journal of Geophysical Research. 96(C10). 18,475-18,489. Schluessel, P., H.-Y. Shin, W. J. Emery, and H. Grassl. 1987. Comparison of satellite-derived sea-surface temperatures with in situ skin measurements. J. Geophysical Research. 92(C3). 2859-2874. Schluessel, P., W. J. Emery, H. Grassl, and T. Mammen. 1990. On the bulk-skin temperature difference and its impact on satellite remote sensing of sea surface temperature. J. Geophysical Research. 95(C8). 13341-13356. Strong, A. E. and E. P. McClain, Improved ocean surface temperatures from space, Comparisons with drifting buoys, Bull. Am. Meteor. Soc., 65(2), 138-142, 1984. Walton, C. C., Nonlinear multichannel algorithms for estimating sea surface temperature with AVHRR satellite data, Journal of Applied Meteorology, 27, 115-27, 1988. Wick, G. A., W. J. Emery, and P. Schluessel. 1992. A comprehensive comparison between satellite-measured skin and multichannel sea surface temperature. Journal of Geophysical Research. 97(C4). 5569-5595. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
University of South Florida > College of Marine Science > Institute for Marine Remote Sensing (IMaRS) > Sea Surface Temperature - Daily University of South Florida, College of Marine Science, Institute for Marine Remote Sensing (IMaRS) http://imars.marine.usf.edu/sst/index.html Address questions and comments to Webmaster Updated Thu Oct 4 09:59:14 EDT 2001 (BJM) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||