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Sea Surface Slope Statistics for Intermediate and Shore Scale Ocean Waves Measured Using a Low-Altitude AircraftOcean surface remote sensing techniques often rely on scattering or emission linked to shorter- scale gravity-capillary ocean wavelets. However, it is increasingly apparent that slightly longer wavelengths of O(10 to 500 cm) are vital components in the robust sea surface description needed to link varied global remote sensing data sets. This paper describes a sensor suite developed to examine sea surface slope variations in the field using an aircraft flying at very low altitude (below 30 m) and will also provide preliminary measurements detailing changes in slope characteristics versus sea state and friction velocity. Two-dimensional surface slope is measured using simultaneous range measurements from three compact short-range laser altimeters mounted in an equilateral triangle arrangement with spacing of about 1 m. In addition, all three lasers provide independent wave elevation profiles after GPS-aided correction for aircraft altitude. Laser range precision is 1 cm rms while vertical motion correction is 15 cm rms. The measurements are made along-track at approximately 1 m intervals setting the spatial scale of the measurement to cover waves of intermediate to long scale. Products available for this array then include surface elevation, two-dimensional slope distribution, and the cross- and along-track 1-D slope distributions. To complement the laser, a down-looking mm-wave radar scatterometer is centered within the laser array to measure radar backscatter simultaneously with the laser slope. The radar's footprint is nominally 1 m in diameter. Near-vertical radar backscatter is inversely proportional to the small-scale surface slope variance and to the tilt of the underlying (laser-measured) surface facet. Together the laser and radar data provide information on wave roughness from the longest scales down to about 1 cm. These measurements are complemented by aircraft turbulence probe data that provides robust surface flux information.
Document ID
20000110131
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Vandemack, Douglas
(NASA Wallops Flight Facility Wallops Island, VA United States)
Crawford, Tim
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Idaho Falls, ID United States)
Dobosy, Ron
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Idaho Falls, ID United States)
Elfouhaily, Tanos
(Johns Hopkins Univ. Laurel, MD United States)
Busalacchi, Antonio J.
Date Acquired
August 19, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1999
Subject Category
Oceanography
Meeting Information
Meeting: IGARSS''99
Location: Hamburg
Country: Germany
Start Date: June 29, 1999
End Date: July 2, 1999
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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