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e-Article

The Surface Water and Ocean Topography Mission: A Breakthrough in Radar Remote Sensing of the Ocean and Land Surface Water.
Document Type
Article
Source
Geophysical Research Letters. 2/28/2024, Vol. 51 Issue 4, p1-9. 9p.
Subject
*OCEAN surface topography
*REMOTE sensing by radar
*OCEAN
*HYDROSPHERE (Earth)
*LAKES
*WATER levels
*OCEAN circulation
*FLOOD damage prevention
Language
ISSN
0094-8276
Abstract
The elevations of water surfaces hold important information on the earth's oceans and land surface waters. Ocean sea surface height is related to the internal change of the ocean's density and mass associated with ocean circulation and its response to climate change. The flow rates of rivers and volume changes of lakes are crucial to freshwater supplies and the hazards of floods and drought resulting from extreme weather and climate events. The Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) Mission is a new satellite using advanced radar technology to make headway in observing the variability of the elevation of water surfaces globally, providing fundamentally new information previously not available to the study of earth's waters. Here, we provide the first results of SWOT over oceans, rivers, and lakes. We demonstrate the potential of the mission to address science questions in oceanography and hydrology. Plain Language Summary: Earth is a water planet. The vast amount of ocean water has stored most of the heat released to the atmosphere since the Industrial Revolution through burning fossil fuels. Climate change is thus moderated by the ocean. Over land the freshwater in lakes, rivers, and reservoirs, a critical natural resource, is affected by the warming climate and direct human modifications. Processes of oceanic uptake of heat and carbon from the atmosphere and cycling of freshwater on land take place at spatial scales too small to have been adequately quantified from space. A new satellite, the Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) mission, was launched in December 2022. Using advanced radar technology, SWOT provides unprecedented global observations for understanding the ocean's role in climate change and how freshwater resources respond to human influence. SWOT observations near coasts will also advance understanding of how rising sea levels impact those coasts. Key Points: The first space observations of submesoscale ocean surface topography for understanding ocean's role in heat uptake from the atmosphereThe first space observations of the change of water storage of lakes and flow rates of rivers for understanding the freshwater cycleThe first space observations of the details of the change of coastal water levels to assess the impact of local sea level rise [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]