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The Salinity Pilot-Mission Exploitation Platform (Pi-MEP): A Hub for Validation and Exploitation of Satellite Sea Surface Salinity DataThe Pilot-Mission Exploitation Platform (Pi-MEP) for salinity is an ESA initiative originally meant to support and widen the uptake of Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission data over the ocean. Starting in 2017, the project aims at setting up a computational web-based platform focusing on satellite sea surface salinity data, supporting studies on enhanced validation and scientific process over the ocean. It has been designed in close collaboration with a dedicated science advisory group in order to achieve three main objectives: gathering all the data required to exploit satellite sea surface salinity data, systematically producing a wide range of metrics for comparing and monitoring sea surface salinity products’ quality, and providing user-friendly tools to explore, visualize and exploit both the collected products and the results of the automated analyses. The Salinity Pi-MEP is becoming a reference hub for the validation of satellite sea surface salinity missions by providing valuable information on satellite products (SMOS, Aquarius, SMAP), an extensive in situ database (e.g., Argo, thermosalinographs, moorings, drifters) and additional thematic datasets (precipitation, evaporation, currents, sea level anomalies, sea surface temperature, etc.). Co-localized databases between satellite products and in situ datasets are systematically generated together with validation analysis reports for 30 predefined regions. The data and reports are made fully accessible through the web interface of the platform. The datasets, validation metrics and tools (automatic, user-driven) of the platform are described in detail in this paper. Several dedicated scientific case studies involving satellite SSS data are also systematically monitored by the platform, including major river plumes, mesoscale signatures in boundary currents, high latitudes, semi-enclosed seas, and the high-precipitation region of the eastern tropical Pacific. Since 2019, a partnership in the Salinity Pi-MEP project has been agreed between ESA and NASA to enlarge focus to encompass the entire set of satellite salinity sensors. The two agencies are now working together to widen the platform features on several technical aspects, such as triple-collocation software implementation, additional match-up collocation criteria and sustained exploitation of data from the SPURS campaigns
Document ID
20220002286
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Sebastien Guimbard
(OceanScope 38 Rue Jim Sevellec, 29200 Brest, France)
Nicolas Reul
(University of Brest Brest, France)
Roberto Sabia
(European Space Research Institute Frascati, Italy)
Sylvain Herledan
(OceanDataLab 870 Route de Deolen, 29280 Locmaria Plouzané, France)
Ziad El Khoury Hanna
(OceanDataLab 870 Route de Deolen, 29280 Locmaria Plouzané, France)
Jean-Francois Piolle
(University of Brest Brest, France)
Frederic Paul
(University of Brest Brest, France)
Tong Lee
(Jet Propulsion Lab La Cañada Flintridge, California, United States)
Julian J. Schanze
(Earth and Space Research Seattle, Washington, United States)
Frederick M Bingham ORCID
(University of North Carolina Wilmington Wilmington, North Carolina, United States)
David Le Vine
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Nadya Vinogradova-Shiffer
(National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States)
Susanne Mecklenburg
(European Centre for Space Applications and Telecommunications Didcot, United Kingdom)
Klaus Scipal
(European Space Research Institute Frascati, Italy)
Henri Laur
(European Space Research Institute Frascati, Italy)
Date Acquired
February 10, 2022
Publication Date
November 16, 2021
Publication Information
Publication: Remote Sensing
Publisher: MDPI
Volume: 13
Issue: 22
Issue Publication Date: November 16, 2021
e-ISSN: 2072-4292
Subject Category
Geosciences (General)
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 718296.02.01.01.07
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NM0018D0004P00002
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH10FN01Z
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
ocean
sea surface salinity
validation
remote sensing
L-band
SMOS
SMAP
Aquarius
CCI
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