water/hydrosphere mapper: a wide swath altimetry mission for hydrology and oceanography
DESCRIPTION
WaTER/Hydrosphere Mapper: A wide swath altimetry mission for hydrology and oceanography Lee-Lueng Fu Douglas Alsdorf Nelly Mognard OSTST Meeting, March 12-15, 2007 Hobart, Australia. Progress made since the Venice Meeting. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
WaTER/Hydrosphere Mapper:
A wide swath altimetry mission for hydrology and oceanography
Lee-Lueng FuDouglas AlsdorfNelly Mognard
OSTST Meeting, March 12-15, 2007Hobart, Australia
• At the Venice meeting a year ago, Hydrosphere Mapper and WaTER were separately presented as potential future missions using wide-swath altimetry technique.
• Via a workshop held in last October, the oceanography and land hydrology communities discussed their respective requirements and found that a single mission was able to meet the needs of both communities (http://earthsciences.osu.edu/~alsdorf/files/WideSwath/)
• A joint oceanography and hydrology session was held in last AGU, showing the wide range of science and application opportunities provided by a joint WaTER/Hydrosphere Mission.
• Such a mission has been recommended as Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission by the NRC Decadal Survey for launch in the time frame of 2013-2016.
Progress made since the Venice Meeting
Small-scale Variability of the Ocean Unresolved by Nadir-looking Altimeter
100 km
ground tracks of Jason (thick) and T/P (thin) Tandem Mission
100 km scale eddies resolvable by WSOA
10 km scale eddiesResolvable by WaTER/HM
41.9º N
42.5º N
< 10 km
< 10 km
Coastal currents have scales less than 10 km
< 10 km
Observations made by ADCP offshore from the US
West Coast
T. Strub, 2006
h ~ 5 cm v ~ 50 cm/sec
Scott (2005)
McWilliams (2006)
Sub-mesoscale variability
Sub-mesoscale processes are poorly observed but important to the understanding of the dissipation mechanism of ocean circulation.
Radius of deformation
Radius of deformation
Altimetry SSH wavenumber spectrum
Wavenumber (cycles/km)
Pow
er d
ensi
ty (
cm2 /
cycl
es/k
m)
Noise level of WaTER/HM for 2 cm measurement noise at 2 km resolution
Jason pass 132 (147 cycle average)
Much reduced noise floor will enable the study of the spectrum at sub-mesoscales which have not been well resolved from existing data.
USGS Coverage: ~7000 gauges
Gauging from Space ≠ WaTER/HM
Birkett, C.M., L.A.K. Mertes, T. Dunne, M.H. Costa, and M.J. Jasinski,Journal of Geophysical Research, 107, 2003.Hirsch, R.M., and J.E. Costa, EOS Transactions AGU, 85, 197-203, 2004.
Amazon: 6 M km2, ~175,000 m3/sU.S.: 7.9 M km2, Mississippi ~17,500 m3/s
OSTP 2004: “Does the United States have enough water? We do not know.”“What should we do? Use modern science and technology to determine how much water is currently available …”
Using a radar altimeter, 32% of the rivers and 72% of the world’s lakes are not sampled
Topex/POSEIDON: ~70 points
Amazonian wetlands are 750,000 km2
Alaskan braided river
K. Douce Photo
Problems with 1D Stream Gauge Measurements
Measurements Required to Address Science & Applications : h, h/x, h/t, and area,
globally, on a ~weekly basis
∆S = h/tPhotos: B. Kiel, K. Frey
Siberian Arctic
Muskingum R., Ohio
q – Qx = h
tL
h( )Q =
k xRn
2/31/2
Continuity Equation
A Typical Flow Law
R = Hydraulic radius
Targets are Global
Matthews, E. and I. Fung, GBC, 1, 61-86, 1987.
Peace-Athabasca Delta: 3200 km2
Coastal Zones
Braided Rivers Reservoirs Worldwide
Floods
Congo River Basin: 3.7M km2
New Orleans
Ohio R.
Costa Rica
Canada
Alaska
N. Korea
WaTER/Hydrosphere MapperA SAR interferometry radar altimeter Near-global coverage with
16-day repeat orbit
• Same technique as WSOA – radar interferometry• Use of SAR to enhance the along-track resolution• 0.5 cm measurement precision at 2 km resolution• 1 micro-radian precision in mean sea surface slope at 2 km resolution • No data gap near the coast
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1 Nu
mb
er o
f O
bse
rvat
ion
Tidal aliasing of sun-synchronous orbit
0.0
200.0
400.0
600.0
800.0
1000.0
1200.0
1400.0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40
M2
N2
O1
Q1
K1, P1
K2
ali
as
pe
rio
d (
da
ys
)
Satellite Repeat Period
• S1 and S2 aliased to zero frequency and hence contaminate mean circulation
• K1 and P1 aliased to annual and K2 to semiannual periods
annual
semiannual
Chambers et al, 2000
Internal tides from altimetry
Wavenumber spectrum100 km
Ray & Mitchum (1997)
Besides the intrinsic science of internal tides, they introduce 1-5 cm/sec error in ocean current velocity at mesoscales.
Two key issues for OSTST to consider
• The choice of orbit:
Although a sun-synchronous orbit has significant cost and technical benefits, the tidal aliasing problem will significantly reduce the value of the mission to oceanographic applications. Do we need any further studies before putting this issue to bed? (to be discussed in the Tide Splinter)
• The wet tropospheric correction in coastal oceans:
As the interferometry technique is able to provide SSH measurements next to the coast line, the land contamination of the microwave radiometer observations will limit their utility for high-resolution coastal applications.