On the \textquotedblleftCal-Mode\textquotedblright Correction to TOPEX Satellite Altimetry and Its Effect on the Global Mean Sea Level Time Series

Author
Keywords
Abstract
Comparison of satellite altimetry against a high-quality network of tide gauges suggests that sea-surface heights from the TOPEX altimeter may be biased by \textpm5 mm, in an approximate piecewise linear, or U-shaped, drift. This has been previously reported in at least two other studies. The bias is probably caused by use of an internal calibration-mode range correction, included in the TOPEX \textquotedblleftnet instrument\textquotedblright correction, which is suspect owing to changes in the altimeter\textquoterights point target response. Removal of this correction appears to mitigate most of the drift problem. In addition, a new time series based on retracking the TOPEX waveforms, again without the calibration-mode correction, also reduces the drift aside for a clear problem during the first 2 years. With revision, the TOPEX measurements, combined with successor Jason altimeter measurements, show global mean sea level rising fairly steadily throughout most of 24 year time period, with rates around 3 mm/yr, although higher over the last few years.
Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
Number of Pages
8371-8384
Date Published
11/2017
DOI
10.1002/2017JC013090
Download citation