Comparison of satellite‐derived sea surface temperatures with in situ skin measurements

Sea surface temperatures (SSTs), computed from sensor systems on the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) polar-orbiting satellites, are compared with surface skin temperatures (from an infrared radiometer mounted on a ship) and subsurface temperature measurements. Three split window retrieval methods using channels 4 and 5 of the NOAA 7 advanced very high resolution radiometer (AVHRR) sensor were investigated. These methods were (1) using AVHRR alone, (2) using AVHRR with atmospheric temperature and water vapor profiles from the TIROS operational vertical sounder (TOVS), and (3) using AVHRR and data from the high-resolution infrared sounder (HIRS). TOVS sensors (including HIRS) are carried by the same satellite as the AVHRR and provide simultaneous corrections for the AVHRR-based SST estimates. The importance of scan angle correction to define the correct atmospheric path is discussed, and the improvement of SST retrievals using sensor combinations is demonstrated with satellite versus ship skin temperature mean differences ranging from 0.55° to 0.73°C for AVHRR alone, from −0.39° to 0.71°C for AVHRR plus TOVS, and from 0.22° to 0.33°C for AVHRR plus HIRS. The improved SST accuracy by AVHRR plus HIRS is due to additional correction for the atmospheric water vapor and temperature structures, made possible with some of the HIRS channels. Significant differences between ship skin and subsurface temperatures were observed, with the mean deviation being 0.2°C for a range of temperature differences between −0.25° and 0.6°C.

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