Abstract
New bathymetry models in the northwestern Pacific Ocean are presented at 1 arc-minute and 15 arc-second resolution. The latest version of the altimetric vertical gravity gradient (VGG) anomalies from Scripps Institute of Oceanography, ∼7 million single-beam depths from the National Centers for Environmental Information, and ∼80 GB of multibeam grids from the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology are used. The ship-board depths are used to constrain bathymetry at wavelengths longer than 200 km, and calibrate the local topography to VGG ratio at 15–200 km wavelength bands. The VGG is used to predict bathymetry at 15 ∼ 200 km wavelength bands. The spectrum analysis results show that the 1 arc-minute model has more power than models predicted from gravity anomalies at wavelengths shorter than 100 km. The standard deviation of differences between the 1 arc-minute model and ship-board depths is 44.76 m, and it is 102.842 m comparing to the SIO topo_20.1.nc model. The accuracy of the new 1 arc-minute model has been improved significantly from our last bathymetry model, BAT_VGG, and has a better accuracy than that of the DTU18, GEBCO_08, and ETOPO1 models. The accuracy of the 15 arc-second model is consistent with that of SRTM + V2.1 and GEBCO_2020.
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