Relative Performance of the MLE3 and MLE4 Retracking Algorithms on Jason-2 Altimeter Waveforms

Author
Keywords
Abstract
For all altimeter missions, precise estimates of geophysical parameters are obtained thanks to an algorithm called retracking that fits an analytical model to the measured waveforms. The Brown model provides a good representation of the return echo over deep ocean surfaces and is commonly used. Many different chains can be considered (and have already been tested) for this processing. An unweighted Least Square Estimate derived from a Maximum Likelihood Estimator (MLE) (Dumont 1985; Rodriguez 1988) is implemented in most altimeter ground processing approaches (TOPEX, Jason-1, Jason-2, and Envisat). The aim of this paper is to evaluate the performance of two retracking algorithms based on the same least square principle: The MLE3 algorithm estimates three parameters (range, significant wave height, and power) whereas the MLE4 estimates four parameters (the three previous ones and the slope of the waveform trailing edge). MLE3 was used on Jason-1 before star tracker problems occurred. The MLE4 algorithm has been used for Jason-1 Version B products and onward and for Jason-2 products from the start of the mission. Both algorithms are compared in the paper. Advantages and drawbacks of both algorithms are pointed out showing notable benefits provided by MLE4 especially for waveforms that do not conform to the Brown model.
Year of Publication
2010
Journal
Marine Geodesy
Volume
33
Number of Pages
317
DOI
10.1080/01490419.2010.491033
Download citation