Earth, Planets and Space (Feb 2024)

An investigation of the on-board microwave radiometer of satellite Altimetry for studying the atmosphere variability

  • Noor Nabilah Abdullah,
  • Dudy Darmawan Wijaya,
  • Irwan Meilano,
  • Wedyanto Kuntjoro,
  • Zamzam Akhmad Jamaluddin Tanuwijaya,
  • Muhammad Rais Abdillah,
  • Fathin Nurzaman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-024-01978-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 76, no. 1
pp. 1 – 19

Abstract

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Abstract Since its first launching, the ability of satellite Altimetry in providing reliable and accurate ocean geophysical information of the sea surface height (SSH), significant wave height (SWH), and wind speed has been proven by numerous researchers, as it was designed for observing the ocean dynamics through nadir range measurement between satellite and the sea surface. However, to achieve high level accuracy, environmental and geophysical effects on the range measurement must be accurately determined and corrected, particularly the effects from the atmospheric water vapor which can divert altimeter range up to 3–45 cm. Thus, satellite Altimetry is originally equipped with the on-board microwave radiometer to measure the water vapour content for correcting the range measurement. To our knowledge, no one has attempted to apply the on-board radiometer for atmospheric studies. In this present work, we attempt to optimize the on-board radiometer data for studying the atmosphere variability due to the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) phenomena. We convert the on-board water vapor data into the precipitable water vapour (PWV), and we then investigate whether the derived PWV can capture the variability of ocean–atmosphere phenomena due to ENSO as accurate as the conventional Altimetry-derived sea level anomaly (SLA). Based on our analysis using the empirical orthogonal function (EOF), the results show convincing argument that Altimetry-derived PWV are reliable in examining the atmospheric fluctuation as the correlation of its primary principal component time series (PC1) with Oceanic Nino Index (ONI) is higher (0.87) than SLA (0.80). These results may reinforce the confidence in the ability of satellite Altimetry for ocean–atmospheric studies. Graphical Abstract

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