4.7 Article

An assessment of marine atmospheric boundary layer roll detection using Sentinel-1 SAR data

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 250, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2020.112031

Keywords

Marine atmospheric boundary layer rolls; Surface wind perturbation; Synthetic aperture radar (SAR); Sentinel-1 wave mode; Imaging sensitivity

Funding

  1. ESA Sentinel-1 Mission Performance Center [4000107360/12/I-LG]
  2. ESA S1-4SCI Ocean Study [4000115170/15/I-SBo]
  3. CNES TOSCA program (COWS) projects
  4. NASA Physical Oceanography grant [NNX17AH17G]
  5. China Scholarship Council (CSC)
  6. French ISblue project [ANR-17-EURE-0015]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The ability of high-resolution synthetic aperture radar (SAR) to detect marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL) roll-induced roughness modulation of the sea surface wave field is well known. This study presents SAR measurements of MABL rolls using global coverage data collected by the European Space Agency's C-band Sentinel-1A satellite in 2016-2017. An automated classifier is used to identify likely roll events from more than 1.3 million images that were acquired at two incidence angles of 23 degrees and 36.5 degrees in either VV or HH polarization. Characteristics of the detected rolls are examined for different wind speeds, polarizations, incidence and relative azimuth angles. Roll detection counts are much higher at the higher incidence angle and nearly equivalent for VV and HH polarizations. Detection depends strongly on the relative azimuth with roll detection rates at crosswind being 3-10 times lower than for upor downwind. All data show a low wind speed threshold near 2 m s(-1) and that rolls are most commonly observed at wind speeds near 9 m s(-1). For all viewing configurations, we find that rolls induce a wide range of mean surface wind speed modulation with the most frequent value being 8% (+/- 3.5%). Roll detection at crosswind is associated with stronger roll-induced surface wind en-hancement. Dependencies of roll detection on the incidence and relative azimuth angles are consistent with rapid short-scale wind-wave adjustments to the roll-induced surface wind gusts. These cm-scale waves are highly directional and provide limited crosswind backscatter at shallower incidence angles. The same roll-induced surface forcing is thus not equally detectable at all viewing geometries or polarizaions. Stronger and possibly longer-duration wind forcing is likely needed to produce detectable roll-induced modulations at crosswind.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available