Earth and Space Science (May 2024)

Reconstruction of Wide Swath Significant Wave Height From Quasi‐Synchronous Observations of Multisource Satellite Sensors

  • Yuchao Yang,
  • Jinpeng Qi,
  • Qiushuang Yan,
  • Chenqing Fan,
  • Rui Zhang,
  • Jie Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2023EA003162
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Global sea wave monitoring is of utmost importance for tasks such as analysis of ocean climate change, offshore fisheries, and early warning of marine disasters. Significant wave height (SWH) is one of the most vital and widely used metrics for measuring sea waves in marine research. Hence, obtaining high precision and extensive coverage measurements of SWH is of great significance for comprehensive sea wave studies. A data set is constructed by combining wave spectrometer and scatterometer data from China‐French Ocean Satellite, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) wave mode data from Sentinel‐1, and altimeter data from Jason‐3 and HY‐2B through space‐time matching method. The multi‐sources integrated data set is used to complete the reconstruction of the wide swath SWH. A model based on stacked autoencoder and deep neural network (SAE‐DNN) is developed. The SWH reconstructed by the model is evaluated with the training‐independent test set. The results demonstrate that the accuracy of the SAE‐DNN model is significantly improved by incorporating SAR joint quasi‐synchronous observations and the root mean square error can reach 0.217 m, which is comparable to the SWH measured by altimeter and highlights the effectiveness and reliability of the model in accurately reconstructing SWH. We further examine and analysis the distance variations between SWH reconstruction sites and Surface Wave Investigation and Monitoring observations, the influence of different SAR features, and the influence of sea state, highlighting the benefits of incorporating SAR data into SAE‐DNN model.

Keywords