Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Jul 2008)

Sea surface wind speed estimation from space-based lidar measurements

  • Y. Hu,
  • K. Stamnes,
  • M. Vaughan,
  • J. Pelon,
  • C. Weimer,
  • D. Wu,
  • M. Cisewski,
  • W. Sun,
  • P. Yang,
  • B. Lin,
  • A. Omar,
  • D. Flittner,
  • C. Hostetler,
  • C. Trepte,
  • D. Winker,
  • G. Gibson,
  • M. Santa-Maria

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 13
pp. 3593 – 3601

Abstract

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Global satellite observations of lidar backscatter measurements acquired by the Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO) mission and collocated sea surface wind speed data from the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for the Earth Observing System (AMSR-E), are used to investigate the relation between wind driven wave slope variance and sea surface wind speed. The new slope variance – wind speed relation established from this study is similar to the linear relation from Cox-Munk (1954) and the log-linear relation from Wu (1990) for wind speed larger than 7 m/s and 13.3 m/s, respectively. For wind speed less than 7 m/s, the slope variance is proportional to the square root of the wind speed, assuming a two dimensional isotropic Gaussian wave slope distribution. This slope variance – wind speed relation becomes linear if a one dimensional Gaussian wave slope distribution and linear slope variance – wind speed relation are assumed. Contributions from whitecaps and subsurface backscattering are effectively removed by using 532 nm lidar depolarization measurements. This new slope variance – wind speed relation is used to derive sea surface wind speed from CALIPSO single shot lidar measurements (70 m spot size), after correcting for atmospheric attenuation. The CALIPSO wind speed result agrees with the collocated AMSR-E wind speed, with 1.2 m/s rms error. Ocean surface with lowest atmospheric loading and moderate wind speed (7–9 m/s) is used as target for lidar calibration correction.