CryoSat Long-Term Ocean Data Analysis and Validation

Final Words on GOP Baseline-C

Journal Article (2023)
Author(s)

M.C. Naeije (TU Delft - Astrodynamics & Space Missions)

Alessandro Di Bella (ESRIN)

Teresa Geminale (Defence & Aerospace Digital Factory)

P.N.A.M. Visser (TU Delft - Space Engineering)

Astrodynamics & Space Missions
Copyright
© 2023 M.C. Naeije, Alessandro Di Bella, Teresa Geminale, P.N.A.M. Visser
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15225420
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 M.C. Naeije, Alessandro Di Bella, Teresa Geminale, P.N.A.M. Visser
Astrodynamics & Space Missions
Issue number
22
Volume number
15
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Abstract

ESA’s Earth explorer mission CryoSat-2 has an ice-monitoring objective, but it has proven to also be a valuable source of observations for measuring impacts of climate change over oceans. In this paper, we report on our long-term ocean data analysis and validation and give our final words on CryoSat-2’s Geophysical Ocean Products (GOP) Baseline-C. The validation is based on a cross comparison with concurrent altimetry and with in situ tide gauges. The highlights of our findings include GOP Baseline-C showing issues with the ionosphere and pole tide correction. The latter gives rise to an east–west pattern in range bias. Between Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) and Low-Resolution Mode (LRM), a 1.4 cm jump in range bias is explained by a 0.5 cm jump in sea state bias, which relates to a significant wave height SAR-LRM jump of 10.5 cm. The remaining 0.9 cm is due to a range bias between ascending and descending passes, exhibiting a clear north–south pattern and ascribed to a timing bias of +0.367 ms, affecting both time-tag and elevation. The overall range bias of GOP Baseline-C is established at −2.9 cm, referenced to all calibrated concurrent altimeter missions. The bias drift does not exceed 0.2 mm/yr, leading to the conclusion that GOP Baseline-C is substantially stable and measures up to the altimeter reference missions. This is confirmed by tide gauge comparison with a selected set of 309 PSMSL tide gauges over 2010–2022: we determined a correlation of R = 0.82, a mean standard deviation of (Formula presented.) cm (common reference and GIA corrected), and a drift of 0.17 mm/yr. In conclusion, the quality, continuity, and reference of GOP Baseline-C is exceptionally good and stable over time, and no proof of any deterioration or platform aging has been found. Any improvements for the next CryoSat-2 Baselines could come from sea state bias optimization, ionosphere and pole tide correction improvement, and applying a calibrated value for any timing biases.