Conference paper
Accurately measuring sea level change from space: an ESA Climate Change Initiative for MSL closure budget studies
CLS1
Helmholtz Centre Potsdam - German Research Centre for Geosciences2
University of Porto3
European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts4
Technische Universität Dresden5
ESRIN - ESA Centre for Earth Observation6
Laboratoire d’Études en Géophysique et Océanographie Spatiales7
Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center8
University of Hamburg9
CGI10
National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark11
Geodesy, National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark12
National Oceanography Centre13
IsardSAT14
...and 4 moreSea level is a very sensitive index of climate change and variability. Sea level integrates the ocean warming, mountain glaciers and ice sheet melting. Understanding the sea level variability and changes implies an accurate monitoring of the sea level variable at climate scales, in addition to understanding the ocean variability and the exchanges between ocean, land, cryosphere, and atmosphere.
That is why Sea Level is one of the Essential Climate Variables (ECV) selected in the frame of the ESA Climate Change Initiative (CCI) program. It aims at providing long-term monitoring of the sea level ECV with regular updates, as required for climate studies. After a first phase (2011-2013), the program has started in 2014 a second phase of 3 years.
The objectives of this second phase are to involve the climate research community, to refine their needs and collect their feedbacks on product quality, to develop, test and select the best algorithms and standards to generate an updated climate time series and to produce and validate the Sea Level ECV product.
This will better answer the climate user needs by improving the quality of the Sea Level products and maintain a sustain service for an up-to-date production. To this extent, the ECV time series has benefited from yearly extension and it now covers the period 1993-2014. A full reprocessing of the dataset will be available in 2016.
We will firstly present the main achievements of the ESA CCI Sea Level Project. On the one hand, the major steps required to produce the 21 years climate time series are briefly described: collect and refine the user requirements, development of adapted algorithms for climate applications and specification of the production system.
On the other hand, the product characteristics are described as well as the results from product validation, performed by several groups of the ocean and climate modeling community. At last, the main improvements derived from the algorithms development dedicated to the 2016 full reprocessing of the dataset are described.
Efforts have also focused on the improvement of the sea level estimation in the Arctic Ocean and in coastal areas for which preliminary results suggest that significant improvements can be achieved.
Language: | English |
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Year: | 2016 |
Proceedings: | ESA Living Planet Symposium 2016 |
Types: | Conference paper |
ORCIDs: | Knudsen, Per and Andersen, Ole Baltazar |