Abstract

<p>Sea level change is an important indicator of global warming. In order to predict future sea level changes, it becomes more and more important to understand the complex contribution of different components (steric changes, melting of ice sheets and glaciers, hydrology,…) to the total sea level change on global and regional scales.</p><p>To distinguish between steric and mass-related sea level changes, we consider (1) satellite altimetry, which measures total sea level change, and (2) Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) and GRACE Follow-On (GRACE-FO) data to derive mass changes within the Earth system. The information of both methods can be combined in a joint inversion approach to derive the individual components of sea level change. However, there is a gap of 11 months between GRACE and GRACE-FO and there are numerous (bi-)monthly gaps since 2011, which means that there is no dedicated gravity field mission to derive ocean mass changes during these times.</p><p>In this contribution, we use time-variable gravity field data from the Swarm satellite mission and Satellite Laser Ranging (SLR) as an additional source of information on mass changes within the inversion approach. Thus, we are able to derive inversion results even in times without GRACE(-FO), albeit at the expense of an inevitably lower spatial resolution. We compare results with GRACE(-FO) data to those without GRACE(-FO) data. Furthermore, we quantify the leverage of Swarm and SLR on the low-resolution mass signal at basin scale in the combined inversion approach during the GRACE(-FO) lifetime.</p>

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