Observing ocean heat content using satellite gravity and altimetry
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Abstract |
A method for combining satellite altimetry observations with satellite measurements of the Earth\textquoterights time-varying gravity to give improved estimates of the ocean\textquoterights heat storage is presented. Over the ocean the time-variable component of the geoid can be related to the time-varying bottom pressure. The methodology of estimating the ocean\textquoterights time-varying heat storage using altimetric observations alone is modified to include observations of bottom pressure. A detailed error analysis of the methodology is undertaken. It is found that the inclusion of bottom pressure improves the ocean heat storage estimates. The improvement comes from a better estimation of the steric sea surface height by the inclusion of bottom pressure in the calculation, over using the altimeter-observed sea surface height alone. On timescales of the annual cycle and shorter the method works particularly well. However, long-timescale changes in the heat storage are poorly reproduced because of deficiencies in the methodology and the presence of contaminating signals in the bottom pressure observations.
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Year of Publication |
2003
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Journal |
Journal of Geophysical Research (Oceans)
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Volume |
108
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Number of Pages |
3031
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Date Published |
02/2003
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URL |
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2003JGRC..108.3031J
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DOI |
10.1029/2002JC001619
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