4.7 Article

Comparisons of Daily Sea Surface Temperature Analyses for 2007-08

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
Volume 23, Issue 13, Pages 3545-3562

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/2010JCLI3294.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA [1283973, 1283976]
  2. NOAA [NA03NES4400001]
  3. NCDC
  4. NOAA Office of Global Programs

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Six different SST analyses are compared with each other and with buoy data for the period 2007-08. All analyses used different combinations of satellite data [for example, infrared Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) and microwave Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR) instruments] with different algorithms, spatial resolution, etc. The analyses considered are theNationalClimaticDataCenter (NCDC) AVHRR-only and AMSR + AVHRR, the Navy Coupled Ocean Data Assimilation (NCODA), the Remote Sensing Systems (RSS), the Real-Time Global High-Resolution (RTG-HR), and the Operational SST and Sea Ice Analysis (OSTIA); the spatial grid sizes were 1/4 degrees, 1/4 degrees, 1/9 degrees, 1/11 degrees, 1/12 degrees, and 1/20 degrees, respectively. In addition, all analyses except RSS used in situ data. Most analysis procedures and weighting functions differed. Thus, differences among analyses could be large in high-gradient and data-sparse regions. An example off the coast of South Carolina showed winter SST differences that exceeded 5 degrees C. To help quantify SST analysis differences, wavenumber spectra were computed at several locations. These results suggested that the RSS is much noisier and that the RTG-HR analysis is much smoother than the other analyses. Further comparisons made using collocated buoys showed that RSS was especially noisy in the tropics and that RTG-HRhad winter biases near the Aleutians region during January and February 2007. The correlation results show that NCODA and, to a somewhat lesser extent, OSTIA are strongly tuned locally to buoy data. The results also show that grid spacing does not always correlate with analysis resolution. The AVHRR-only analysis is useful for climate studies because it is the only daily SST analysis that extends back to September 1981. Furthermore, comparisons of the AVHRR-only analysis and the AMSR+AVHRR analysis show that AMSR data can degrade the combined AMSR and AVHRR resolution in cloud-free regions while AMSR otherwise improves the resolution. These results indicate that changes in satellite instruments over time can impact SST analysis resolution.

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