Characteristics of sea surface temperature retrieved from MTSAT-1R and in-situ data

2011 
Multi-channel sea surface temperature (MCSST) data were retrieved from the Japanese geostationary satellite, MTSAT-1R, for East Asia in western North Pacific. The coefficients used to calculate the MCSST data were estimated by assuming a linear relationship between the brightness temperatures obtained from the satellite and the in-situ buoy SST. It is important to remove cloud contamination pixels to retrieve meaningful information from infrared data. Therefore, the cloud detection algorithm was improved by using a 10-day maximum or minimum composite map for infrared and visible channels. The RMSE of the MCSST in comparison with the two-year buoy SST was about 0.89oC. The error was the largest at mid-latitudes in summer. Additionally, the error between the two SSTs showed that diurnal variation had a positive bias during daytime and a negative bias during nighttime. Furthermore, in 2007, both SSTs showed seasonal and spatial diurnal variation. The magnitude of the daily variation in the MCSST was two times larger than that in the buoy SST, and this was attributed to diurnal heating with a weak surface wind speed.
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