Title: The Proposed WatER Mission and Oceanographic Applications
1The Proposed WatER Mission and Oceanographic
Applications
The following slides provide a very brief
overview of the WatER technology, called KaRIN
(Ka-band Radar Interferometer) and potential
oceanographic applications. Please read the
first three slides if you have only a little
time, whereas the remainder provide some more
detail. The Hydrospheric Mapper uses the same
KaRIN instrument, but the satellite and
operations are designed for oceanographic uses.
We welcome everyone to join and participate in
WatER!
Doug Alsdorf, U.S. WatER PI, alsdorf.1_at_osu.edu
Nelly Mognard, EU WatER PI, nelly.mognard_at_cnes.fr
Ernesto Rodriguez, JPL Engineer of
KaRIN Lee-Lueng Fu, JPL, Topex/Poseidon Project
Scientist and over 150 participants from more
than 20 countries, world wide
Seed funding from Ohio State University, CNES,
JPL, and the Terrestrial Hydrology Program at
NASA
www.geology.ohio-state.edu/water
www.legos.obs-mip.fr/recherches/missions/water
2Altimeter System Characteristics
3Oceanic Processes Resolved by Different Missions
- TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason, and OSTM are primarily
targeting basin scales (broken lines). - WSOA extends the window to cover large eddies
and fronts - HM extends the window to cover coastal upwelling
and other small-scale processes important to
bio-physical interactions. - Without HM, the details of ocean surface
geostrophic currents cannot be fully resolved.
HM
Jason OSTM
4Key Trade Issues Between WatER and the
Hydrosphere Mapper (HM)
- Both WatER and HM share an identical radar
hardware. HM complements WatER with a water
vapour radiometer for making wet tropospheric
delay corrections. This is a relatively minor
addition since the OSTM radiometer can be used
directly. - In order to reduce cost and increase system
stability, a sun-synchronous orbit was chosen for
WatER. This orbit selection is not optimal for
the observation of tides, since the solar tides
are aliased. - The oceanographic community is divided about the
importance of this many believe open ocean tides
are known with an appropriate accuracy, while
others worry about coastal tides, non-linear
tides, and long period tidal aliasing in the
global sea level rise signal. This is the primary
disagreement between the WatER and HM user
communities. - A solution exists which will meet both the WatER
and ocean requirements (including tides) at
greater cost than the WatER concept. - Many of the HM science goals, which concentrate
on ocean mesoscale signals and bathymetry, will
be met with the WatER instrument a radiometer.
5Different Altimeter Coverage Capabilities
OSTM Sampling (10 day cycle)
WSOA Sampling (10 day cycle)
Hydrosphere Mapper (16 day cycle)
6Ocean Eddies Transport Heat Affecting Global
Climate Change
- OSTM does not resolve eddies.
- WSOA would resolve open ocean eddies at low and
mid latitudes, but - only HM could resolve small eddies in coastal
and high-latitude oceans.
WSOA resolution
observations
with eddies
without eddies
7Small-Scale Variability of the Ocean Unresolved
by Nadir Altimetry
ground tracks of Jason (thick) and T/P (thin)
Tandem Mission
10 km scale eddies Resolvable by HM
100 km
100 km scale eddies resolvable by WSOA
8Meeting Bathymetry Requirements
- The bathymetry requirements are (Sandwell et
al) - 1 mrad slope accuracy
- 4 km spatial resolution
- Using conventional altimetry (e.g., the proposed
Abyss mission) these requirements could be met
with a 6-year mission - Coverage limited does not include higher
latitudes - Ocean mesoscale variability may limit slope
accuracy - The Hydrosphere Mapper will achieve the goals of
the Abyss mission in less than 1-year data
collection. Additional time can be used to reduce
mesoscale ocean errors.
Current state of knowledge of Geoid Slope
From Sandwell et al.
Hydropshere Mapper slope accuracy after 14 days
9Surface Water Measurement Requirements
- Height accuracy 5 cm - 10 cm
- Current nadir-altimeter capability 20 cm - 30
cm - Hydrosphere Mapper 1 cm precision, 5 cm - 7cm
systematic errors - Slope accuracy 10 mrad (1 cm/ 1km)
- Current nadir capability cannot be done due to
lack of swath imaging - Hydrosphere Mapper better than 3 mrad in a
single measurement for most rivers - Spatial resolution 100 m imaging
- Nadir altimetry 2 km
- Hydrosphere Mapper better than 100 m
- Spatial coverage global
- Nadir altimetry misses most wetlands and 1/3 of
rivers - Hydrosphere Mapper complete coverage
- Temporal coverage 2 weeks in tropics, better
at higher latitudes - Nadir altimetry 10 day repeats
- Hydropshere Mapper meets requirements
- Requirements derived from Alsdorf and Lettenmaier
(Science, 2003) and the NASA Surface Water
Working Group
10Nadir Altimeters are Incapable of Mapping
Wetlands and Non-Channelized Flow
- Wetlands are globally distributed. Nadir
altimetry will miss 73 of all wetlands - Nadir altimetry will miss 33 of all rivers,
including multiple rivers in the top 100 by
discharge. - Wetlands and floodplains have non-channelized
flow, are geomorphically diverse point
measurements(I.e., nadir altimetry) will not
provide necessary Q and DS. - Need a global dataset of Q and DS concomitant
with other hydrologic missions (e.g., soil
moisture, precipitation). Q DS verify global
hydrologic models.
Non-Channelized Flow
Wetland distribution
Matthews, E. and I. Fung, GBC, 1, 61-86, 1987.
11Example of Wetland Flow ComplexitiesNeed for an
imaging instrument
Interferometric SAR measurements of ?h/?t show
temporal and spatial dynamics in wetland flows
(arrows) that can only be measured with image
based technologies, not nadir altimetry. These
dynamic hydraulics govern sediment and
biogeochemical fluxes (e.g., carbon cycle).
Alsdorf et al., Nature, 404, 174-177, 2000
Alsdorf et al., Geophysical Research Ltrs., 28,
2671-2674, 2001 Alsdorf et al., IEEE TGRS, 39,
423-431, 2001.