Abstract

Based on the scatterometer QuickScat wind data and the water-leaving radiances from the ocean color scanner SeaWiFS data for 2000–2004, we composed a pair of mean annual images of a testing site in the South Caspian Sea under conditions of west-bound and east-bound winds corresponding to the offset and onset state of the shallows in the east of the testing site. It was established that both the “offset” and “onset” radiances grow shorewards, but the former becomes about twice as large as the latter in the middle of the shallows with 10–15 m of water, while their difference tends to zero at the seaward and coastal boundaries of the shallow. These and other findings are hypothetically attributable to the inclination of the sea floor of the shallows, due to which the surfacing of bottom sediments resuspended by the drift current takes less time under the “offset” wind conditions than under the “onset” ones. The study’s results indicate that the effect of the bottom sediments resuspension upon the structure of the images of the marine shallows is universal in character and needs to be taken into account to improve the bio-optical algorithms for estimating the admixtures in the thickness of the shallows from the satellite data.

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