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Satellite-derived salinity data improves Arctic marine circulation prediction

Sea salinity influences the density of the sea, therefore affects ocean circulation and the global climate. Scientists have incorporate sea salinity data obtained from measurements by the SMOS satellite into an Arctic prediction model.

SMOS satellite orbiting Earth (credit: ESA)Investigadores del Researchers at the Barcelona Expert Center (BEC) of the Institut de Ciències del Mar (ICM-CSIC) have proved that satellite-derived salinity improves marine circulation prediction in the Arctic, which, as in the rest of the planet, is directly influenced by this and other parameters such as temperature.

The scientific team has incorporated sea salinity data obtained from measurements by the European Space Agency (ESA) SMOS satellite into the TOPAZ Arctic prediction model, which assimilates in situ data and is used by the Arctic Monitoring and Forecasting Centre (ARC-MFC), distributed by Copernicus. This service generates near real-time forecasts of physical ocean and sea ice conditions, among other products.

"The assimilation of the sea surface salinity maps has had a strong impact on the model, with documented improvements in the Nordic Seas, the Greenland Seas and the Beaufort Sea," explain the BEC and TOPAZ managers, who are confident that they will be able to update the model's time series if the SMOS mission continues.

Salinity, a determining factor in the ocean

Seawater salinity is a parameter that depends on precipitation, evaporation, river discharges and ice melt, and has a direct effect on the climate. Together with temperature, it determines the density of the water which, in turn, drives global ocean circulation and regulates the Earth's climate. However, measuring it in situ is not easy, especially in areas as remote and difficult to access as the Arctic Ocean, which is why the information provided by satellites is so valuable.

Salinity map obtained at the Barcelona Expert Centre (BEC)

"Normally, sea salinity is measured in situ with conductivity, temperature and depth sensors, better known as CTDs. These allow salinity to be obtained over a wide range of depths, but only at specific points and times. Satellites, on the other hand, collect data constantly, whatever the environmental conditions, and even in the most remote areas.

Specifically, we measure salinity using passive microwave remote sensing, which captures the electromagnetic energy emitted by surfaces and which, in the case of the ocean, depends on temperature and salinity," explains Justino Martinez, researcher at the ICM-CSIC.

More accurate and reliable data

"The importance of having reliable and accurate data on sea salinity lies in the fact that it influences the density of the sea, thus affecting ocean circulation. It is also a fundamental indicator for the study of changes in freshwater flows that have been observed in some regions of the Arctic Ocean due to ice melting, which can influence the global climate", points out the ICM-CSIC researcher Carolina Gabarró.

The details of the research, carried out thanks to data collected by SMOS, with which the ICM-CSIC has been working for many years, are included in a study recently published in the journal Earth System Science Data.

There, the authors highlight that the new version of the salinity product has a better spatial resolution and offers greater coverage of salinity than previous versions of the product. Thanks to this, it will be possible to study areas closer to the coast, as well as river mouths or areas of snowmelt.

The new version of the salinity product and the TOPAZ model, which has applications in the study of freshwater input, whether by melting sea ice and land ice, by river input, or by evaporation and precipitation processes, has been funded by the European Space Agency's ARTIC+SSS project. The main objectives of this initiative were to develop new algorithms and methods for processing SMOS data to obtain an Arctic sea surface salinity product and to study the benefits of assimilating these data into circulation models.

"The improvement of satellite data, and consequently of circulation models, is extremely important, especially in the current climate crisis scenario, to understand the changes taking place in the Arctic and to improve future predictions," conclude the researchers.

Reference article:

Martínez, J., Gabarró, C., Turiel, A., González-Gambau, V., Umbert, M., Hoareau, N., González-Haro, C., Olmedo, E., Arias, M., Catany, R., Bertino, L., Raj, R. P., Xie, J., Sabia, R., and Fernández, D.: Improved BEC SMOS Arctic Sea Surface Salinity product v3.1, Earth Syst. Sci. Data, 14, 307–323, https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-14-307-2022, 2022.