Abstract

Despite the recent advances in satellite-based L-band microwave radiometry and retrieval algorithms to provide a unique capability to measure sea surface salinity (SSS) from space and explore its utility for understanding mesoscale dynamics, global ocean circulation, vertical mixing, evaporation rates and climate oscillations, SSS retrieval from L-band microwave radiometric data from the NASA-SMAP (Soil Moisture Active Passive) mission is often biased with systematic errors on larger temporal, spatial scales and random errors on short-time and length scales. To improve the SSS retrieval from SMAP data, we developed a robust algorithm based on a machine-learning approach with high-resolution in-situ data from the Ocean Moored Buoy Network in the Northern Indian Ocean (OMNI), which includes the Arabian Sea (AS) and Bay of Bengal (BoB)). The new algorithm was rigorously trained, tested and validated using the in-situ SSS time series measurements from the AS and BoB. Several sensitive variables were examined and used to improve the SSS estimates – such as radiometric and ancillary data from the satellite observations, sea-surface wind and precipitation from the ERA5 data, and SSS/ SST from the OMNI buoy measurements. The OMNI time-series measurements provided the spatially averaged satellite products to characterize the variability and gross features of SSS in BoB and AS waters on weekly, monthly, seasonal and annual time scales. The systematic validation of SMAP SSS products on a range of spatio-temporal scales showed that the new algorithm improved the SSS estimates by more than 15% in open ocean waters and 25% in river-discharge and precipitation-dominated regions in BoB and AS, when compared to the standard (operational) algorithm. Further analysis demonstrated that the new algorithm reduced clear biases and significant anomalies in SMAP SSS retrievals in the regions of river runoff, surface-freshened ocean and intense tropical cyclones, and captured synoptic/mesoscale SSS features and their seasonal variations in the North Indian Ocean.

Full Text
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