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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-06-14
    Description: In 2018 we celebrated 25 years of development of radar altimetry, and the progress achieved by this methodology in the fields of global and coastal oceanography, hydrology, geodesy and cryospheric sciences. Many symbolic major events have celebrated these developments, e.g., in Venice, Italy, the 15th (2006) and 20th (2012) years of progress and more recently, in 2018, in Ponta Delgada, Portugal, 25 Years of Progress in Radar Altimetry. On this latter occasion it was decided to collect contributions of scientists, engineers and managers involved in the worldwide altimetry community to depict the state of altimetry and propose recommendations for the altimetry of the future. This paper summarizes contributions and recommendations that were collected and provides guidance for future mission design, research activities, and sustainable operational radar altimetry data exploitation. Recommendations provided are fundamental for optimizing further scientific and operational advances of oceanographic observations by altimetry, including requirements for spatial and temporal resolution of altimetric measurements, their accuracy and continuity. There are also new challenges and new openings mentioned in the paper that are particularly crucial for observations at higher latitudes, for coastal oceanography, for cryospheric studies and for hydrology. The paper starts with a general introduction followed by a section on Earth System Science including Ocean Dynamics, Sea Level, the Coastal Ocean, Hydrology, the Cryosphere and Polar Oceans and the “Green” Ocean, extending the frontier from biogeochemistry to marine ecology. Applications are described in a subsequent section, which covers Operational Oceanography, Weather, Hurricane Wave and Wind Forecasting, Climate projection. Instruments’ development and satellite missions’ evolutions are described in a fourth section. A fifth section covers the key observations that altimeters provide and their potential complements, from other Earth observation measurements to in situ data. Section 6 identifies the data and methods and provides some accuracy and resolution requirements for the wet tropospheric correction, the orbit and other geodetic requirements, the Mean Sea Surface, Geoid and Mean Dynamic Topography, Calibration and Validation, data accuracy, data access and handling (including the DUACS system). Section 7 brings a transversal view on scales, integration, artificial intelligence, and capacity building (education and training). Section 8 reviews the programmatic issues followed by a conclusion.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: The ocean is key to understanding societal threats including climate change, sea level rise, ocean warming, tsunamis, and earthquakes. Because the ocean is difficult and costly to monitor, we lack fundamental data needed to adequately model, understand, and address these threats. One solution is to integrate sensors into future undersea telecommunications cables. This is the mission of the SMART subsea cables initiative (Science Monitoring And Reliable Telecommunications). SMART sensors would “piggyback” on the power and communications infrastructure of a million kilometers of undersea fiber optic cable and thousands of repeaters, creating the potential for seafloor-based global ocean observing at a modest incremental cost. Initial sensors would measure temperature, pressure, and seismic acceleration. The resulting data would address two critical scientific and societal issues: the long-term need for sustained climate-quality data from the under-sampled ocean (e.g., deep ocean temperature, sea level, and circulation), and the near-term need for improvements to global tsunami warning networks. A Joint Task Force (JTF) led by three UN agencies (ITU/WMO/UNESCO-IOC) is working to bring this initiative to fruition. This paper explores the ocean science and early warning improvements available from SMART cable data, and the societal, technological, and financial elements of realizing such a global network. Simulations show that deep ocean temperature and pressure measurements can improve estimates of ocean circulation and heat content, and cable-based pressure and seismic-acceleration sensors can improve tsunami warning times and earthquake parameters. The technology of integrating these sensors into fiber optic cables is discussed, addressing sea and land-based elements plus delivery of real-time open data products to end users. The science and business case for SMART cables is evaluated. SMART cables have been endorsed by major ocean science organizations, and JTF is working with cable suppliers and sponsors, multilateral development banks and end users to incorporate SMART capabilities into future cable projects. By investing now, we can build up a global ocean network of long-lived SMART cable sensors, creating a transformative addition to the Global Ocean Observing System.
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
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    In:  XXVIII General Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG)
    Publication Date: 2023-07-05
    Description: We investigate the cascade of low-mode internal tide energy from primary to supertidal frequencies in a realistically forced global Hybrid Coordinate Ocean Model (HYCOM) simulation with a 4-km horizontal resolution. Supertidal kinetic energy (KE) is elevated in low-latitude regions, where stratification is strong and rotation is weak, e.g., near the Amazon Shelf, Bay of Bengal, and Mascarene Ridge, and amounts up to 50% of the total internal tide KE several 100 km away from the generation sites. We compute time-mean and depth-integrated supertidal flux divergence and topographic barotropic to baroclinic energy conversion. The flux divergence is organized in regularly spaced banding patterns along the horizontal internal tide beams. The separation distance between the bands is larger than a semidiurnal mode 1 wavelength. The positive flux divergence of 10-50 mWm2 cannot be explained with the supertidal topographic conversion, which is negligible. Instead, it agrees with nonlinear KE transfer rates from the tidal to the supertidal band, which are computed with the novel coarse-graining approach. Both the supertidal flux divergence and nonlinear KE transfers are enhanced in patches near the surface, where KE is large. We attribute the elevated surface KE in the banding patterns to the constructive interference between semidiurnal mode 1 and mode 2 internal tides, which propagate away from the generation sites. These nonlinear KE transfers are due to triad wave-wave interactions. While this HYCOM simulation begins to resolve nonlinear energy transfers and the internal wave energy cascade, we anticipate that future higher-resolution simulations will lead to further improvements.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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