Abstract

Observational data on ocean subsurface temperature and salinity are patently insufficient because in situ observations are complex and costly, while satellite remote-sensed measurements are abundant but mainly focus on sea surface data. To make up for the ocean interior data shortage and entirely use the abundant satellite data, we developed a data-driven deep learning model named Convformer to reconstruct ocean subsurface temperature and salinity fields from satellite-observed sea surface data. Convformer is designed by deeply optimizing Vision Transformer and ConvLSTM, consisting of alternating residual connections between multiple temporal and spatial attention blocks. The input variables consist of sea surface temperature (SST), sea surface salinity (SSS), sea surface height (SSH), and sea surface wind (SSW). Our results demonstrate that Convformer exhibits superior performance in estimating the temperature-salinity structure of the tropical Pacific Ocean. The all-depth average root mean square error (RMSE) of the reconstructed subsurface temperature (ST)/subsurface salinity (SS) is 0.353 °C/0.0695 PSU, with correlation coefficients (R²) of 0.98663/0.99971. In the critical thermocline, although the root mean square errors of ST and SS reach 0.85 °C and 0.121 PSU, respectively, they remain smaller compared to other models. Furthermore, we assessed Convformer’s performance from various perspectives. Notably, we also delved into the potential of Convformer to extract physical and dynamic information from a model mechanism perspective. Our study offers a practical approach to reconstructing the subsurface temperature and salinity fields from satellite-observed sea surface data.

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