Abstract

The satellite lidar-derived ocean particulate backscattering coefficient (bbp) has rarely been validated globally within situobservations, and we need to understand how well the satellite CALIPSO lidar bbpapproach performs. Whether lidar bbpperforms better in terms of observation accuracy compared to passive ocean color remote sensing has yet to be evaluated for detailed validation. With the continued deployment of the BGC-Argo float array in the global open ocean in recent years, data have accumulated with a total of 42,932 particulate backscattering coefficients (bbp) from 2010 to 2017, allowing for a finer spatial and temporal scale evaluation of the performance of the CALIPSO lidar-observed bbp. We evaluated the performance of CALIPSO-retrieved bbpproducts using the data detected by the BGC-Argo floats at 12 spatiotemporal matchup scales and discussed the differences in product performance at various interannual, seasonal, and spatial scales. We compare lidar, float, and ocean color bbpat the same locations and times and find that lidar bbpoutperforms ocean color data. We also analyzed the key conversion factor β(π)/bbpat different spatial and temporal scales and found that there was a seasonal difference in the optimal conversion factor.

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