Abstract

Poseidon-4 is a dual-frequency redundant radar altimeter on board the European Commission Copernicus Programme Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich satellite, that represents a significant breakthrough with respect to its predecessors Jason-class altimeters due to its digital architecture and to its innovative measurements and calibration modes.In the framework of the Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich commissioning preparatory activities, CNES has contracted CLS for the development of a Sentinel-6 Processing Prototype (S6PP) application. S6PP is a multi-chain processing suite able to process Sentinel-6 Level-1A and Level-1B data products up to Level-2. The novel algorithms developed in the CNES/CLS research and development activities are implemented within S6PP and validated to support the different thematic applications (in particular inland water and ocean) and in view of promoting them for possible implementation in the operational ground segment.The present work covers in particular the main results over open ocean for the main altimetric geophysical variables over the sea surface (sea surface height anomaly, significant wave-height, sigma-nought and wind speed) derived by the Low-Resolution Mode (LRM) and High-Resolution Mode (HRM) chains of S6PP in terms of precision, accuracy, spectral content and measurement stability.Given the reported variation of the payload in-orbit temperatures along with the reported instrumental ageing, and given the tight requirement to measure the GMSL (Global Mean Sea Level) in seamless continuity with Jason-3, the clear goal for S6PP was to process the S6-MF data with the minimum possible level of approximations along the processing pipeline but still maintaining a very efficient prototype from the computational point of view.For this scope, a novel and computationally efficient numerical retracking scheme with interface to the in-flight PTR (Point Target Response) provided by the instrument calibration chain has been put in place within S6PP for both the Low-Resolution and High-Resolution modes whereas the Delay-Doppler beam-forming is carried out by applying the range walk correction based on a computationally efficient algorithm (Chirp Zeta-Transform).The impact of the range walk correction and of the in-flight PTR interface is assessed for HRM and LRM, respectively.The paper shows that the proposed processing baseline ensures a dataset robust from the currently known instrumental degradation or ageing issues, both in LRM and HRM mode and, once this is done, that Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich global mean sea level measurement is in line with the one measured by Jason-3.

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