Frontiers in Marine Science (Sep 2024)
Exploring Siamese network to estimate sea state bias of synthetic aperture radar altimeter
Abstract
Sea state bias (SSB) is a crucial error of satellite radar altimetry over the ocean surface. For operational nonparametric SSB (NPSSB) models, such as two-dimensional (2D) or three-dimensional (3D) NPSSB, the solution process becomes increasingly complex and the construction of their regression functions pose challenges as the dimensionality of relevant variables increases. And most current SSB correction models for altimeters still follow those of traditional nadir radar altimeters, which limits their applicability to Synthetic Aperture Radar altimeters. Therefore, to improve this situation, this study has explored the influence of multi-dimensional SSB models on Synthetic Aperture Radar altimeters. This paper proposes a deep learning-based SSB estimation model called SNSSB, which employs a Siamese network framework, takes various multi-dimensional variables related to sea state as inputs, and uses the difference in sea surface height (SSH) at self-crossover points as the label. Experiments were conducted using Sentinel-6 self-crossover data from 2021 to 2023, and the model is evaluated using three main metrics: the variance of the SSH difference, the explained variance, and the SSH difference variance index (SVDI). The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed SNSSB model can further improve the accuracy of SSB estimation. On a global scale, compared to the traditional NPSSB, the multi-dimensional SNSSB not only decreases the variance of the SSH difference by over 11%, but also improves the explained variance by 5-10 cm2 in mid- and low-latitude regions. And the regional SNSSB also performs well, reducing the variance of the SSH difference by over 10% compared to the NPSSB. Additionally, the SNSSB model improves the computational efficiency by approximately 100 times. The favorable results highlight the potential of the multi-dimensional SNSSB in constructing SSB models, particularly the five-dimensional (5D) SNSSB, representing a breakthrough in overcoming the limitations of traditional NPSSB for constructing high-dimensional models. This study provides a novel approach to exploring the multiple influencing factors of SSB.
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