4.7 Article

Sensitivity of Altimeter Wave Height Assessment to Data Selection

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 12, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs12162608

Keywords

altimeter; validation; buoys; ocean; coastal zone; data-flagging; sensitivity studies; Jason-3; Sentinel-3A

Funding

  1. European Space Agency as part of the SSCCI project of the Climate Change Initiative (CCI) (ESA ESRIN/Contract) [4000123651/18/I-NB]
  2. project NERC Earth Observation Data Acquisition and Analysis Service (NEODAAS)
  3. NERC [nceo020007] Funding Source: UKRI

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This paper addresses the issue of how the selection of buoys and the calculation of altimeter averages affect the metrics characterising the errors of altimetric wave height estimates. The use of a 51-point median reduces the sensitivity to occasional outliers, but the quality of this measure can be improved by demanding that there is a minimum number of valid measurements. This had a marked impact in both the open ocean and the coastal zone. It also affected the relative ordering of algorithms' performances, as some fared poorly when a representative value was gleaned from a single waveform inversion, but had a much better ranking when a minimum of 20 values were used. Validation procedures could also be improved by choosing altimeter-buoy pairings that showed a good consistency. This paper demonstrated an innovative procedure using the median of the different retrackers analysed, which can be easily extended to other data validation exercises. This led to improved comparison statistics for all algorithms in the open ocean, with many showing errors less than 0.2 m, but there was only one strong change in the relative performance of the 11 Jason-3 retrackers. For Sentinel-3A, removing the inconsistent coastal buoys showed that all of the new algorithms had similar errors of just over 0.2 m. Thus, although improvements were found in the procedure used for the Sea State Round Robin exercise, the relative rankings for the buoy calibrations are mostly unaffected.

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