Comparison of In Situ and Satellite-Derived Sea Surface Temperatures in the Gulf of Carpentaria

2007 
Abstract During 30 days in May and June 2003, the R/V Southern Surveyor was operating in the Gulf of Carpentaria, northern Australia. Measurements of sea surface temperature (SST) were made with an accurate single-channel infrared radiometer as well as with the ship’s thermosalinograph. These ship-based measurements have been used to assess the quality of the SST derived from nine satellite-borne instruments. The satellite dataset compiled during this period also allows the intercomparison of satellite-derived SST fields in areas not covered by the ship’s track. An assessment of the SST quality from each satellite instrument is presented, and suggestions for blending ground and satellite measurements into a single product are made. These suggestions are directly applicable to the international Global Ocean Data Assimilation Experiment (GODAE) High Resolution SST Pilot Project (GHRSST-PP) that is currently developing an operational system to provide 6-hourly global fields of SST at a spatial resolution clo...
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