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Satellite infrared measurement of sea surface temperature : empirically evaluating the thin approximationKowalski, Andrew S. 09 February 1993 (has links)
Satellite technology represents the only technique for measuring sea surface
temperatures (SSTs) on a global scale. SSTs are important as boundary conditions for
climate and atmospheric boundary layer models which attempt to describe phenomena
of all scales, ranging from local forecasts to predictions of global warming.
Historical use of infrared satellite measurements for SST determination has been
based on a theory which assumes that the atmosphere is 'thin', i.e., that atmospheric
absorption of infrared radiation emitted from the sea surface has very little effect on
the radiant intensity that is measured by satellites. However, a variety of independent
radiative transfer models point to the possibility that the so-called 'thin approximation'
is violated for humid atmospheres such as those found in the tropics, leading to errors
in the retrieved SST that would be unacceptable to those who make use of such
products. Furthermore, such tropical regions represent a significant portion of the
globe, where coupled ocean-atmosphere disturbances can have global effects (e.g., the
tropical Pacific El Nino-Southern Oscillation events).
This study evaluates the thin approximation empirically, by combining radiative
transfer theory and satellite data from the Eastern Atlantic ocean region studied during
the Atlantic Statocumulus Transition Experiment (ASTEX). Six months of satellite data
from May, June, and July of 1983 and 1984 are analyzed. To the degree that the data
may be considered representative of globally valid relationships between measured
variables, it is shown that the thin approximation is not appropriate for the tropics.
This suggests that new methods are necessary for retrieving SSTs from the more
humid regions of the globe. / Graduation date: 1993
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Satellite observations of the in���uence of mesoscale ocean eddies on near-surface temperature, phytoplankton and surface stressGaube, Peter 02 November 2012 (has links)
The influence of mesoscale ocean eddies on near-surface ocean temperature, surface stress and phytoplankton communities is investigated by collocating numerous satellite measurements along with vertical profiles of oceanic temperature and salinity to the interiors of eddies identified and tracked in altimetric sea surface height maps.
The surface currents associated with mesoscale ocean eddies impart a curl of the surface stress from the relative motion between surface air and water. This stress curl has a polarity opposite that of the vorticity of the eddy, thus attenuating the eddies by generating Ekman upwelling in the cores of anticyclones and downwelling in the cores of cyclones. Ekman pumping also arises from eddy-induced spatial variability of the sea surface temperature (SST) field that generates a wind stress curl in regions of crosswind SST gradients through a response of surface winds to SST-induced surface heating variations. SST-induced Ekman pumping is shown to be secondary to surface current-induced pumping in most regions of the World Ocean. Eddy-induced Ekman pumping resulting from the combination of surface current effects and air-sea interaction represents an order 1 perturbation of the background, basin-scale Ekman pumping velocities from the large-scale wind fields.
In western boundary currents and equatorward-flowing eastern boundary currents, cyclonic eddies preferentially entrain water from the coastal side of the boundary current, which primes the interiors of cyclones to have phytoplankton concentrations that are elevated relative to the background. In contrast, anticyclones formed in these regions contain locally depressed phytoplankton concentrations from the offshore waters. While eddy pumping from vertical displacements of isopycnals during eddy formation can affect the biology in the interiors of cyclones during the transient stage of their development, this ecosystem response cannot be sustained because of the persistent eddy-induced Ekman downwelling throughout the rest of the eddy lifetimes. Likewise, the persistent eddy-induced Ekman upwelling in anticyclones is of little benefit because of their low phytoplankton content at the time of formation. A definitive response to eddy pumping is therefore difficult to detect from satellite observations alone.
Eddies formed in regions where anticyclones preferentially entrain water with elevated phytoplankton concentrations, such as the South Indian Ocean, or in some mid-ocean gyre regions where small-amplitude eddies form (e.g., the oligotrophic South Pacific), an ecosystem response to eddy-induced Ekman pumping is observed. Conversely, cyclones in these regions entrain water that is low in chlorophyll, resulting in negative chlorophyll anomalies that are sustained by Ekman downwelling throughout the eddy lifetimes. The phytoplankton response to eddy-induced Ekman upwelling in anticyclones is seasonal, occurring only during the winter. It is proposed that the mechanism for the lack of ecosystem response to eddy-induced Ekman upwelling during the summer is the decoupling of the mixed layer from the nutricline.
The observations presented in this dissertation provide a baseline from which coupled ocean circulation and biogeochemical models can be assessed. If coupled models are able to reproduce correctly the observed influence of mesoscale eddies on photoautotrophic communities, further insight into the mechanisms for this variability could be gained from the model output using the methodologies developed in this dissertation together with investigation of subsurface variability in the models below the depth to which chlorophyll can be inferred from the satellite observations. / Graduation date: 2013
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