Abstract

The purpose of the study is to assess the suitability of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data to provide sea surface wind (SSW) fields along with a spatial distribution of both SSW speed and direction uncertainty. A simple methodology based on geophysical model function (GMF) inversion to obtain a spatial distribution of both SSW speed and its uncertainty is proposed. Exploiting a dataset of Sentinel-1 images, a sensitivity analysis of the SSW speed uncertainty is carried out on both the uncertainties and the mean values of SAR normalised radar cross section (NRCS), incidence angle and SSW direction, at different spatial scales. The results show that SSW speed uncertainty significantly increases with wind vector cell (WVC) dimension. Moreover, the dominant contribution to the SSW speed uncertainty due to both NRCS and SSW direction uncertainty must always be taken into account. A better precision and accuracy in the estimation of SSW speed and its uncertainty is evidenced by C-band model 7 (CMOD7) GMF rather than the C-band model 5.N (CMOD5.N). To evaluate the results of SSW retrievals, wind data from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) model are also exploited for comparisons. Findings indicate a high correlation between the uncertainty from SAR estimations and that from the comparison of SAR vs. ECMWF.

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