1. TOPEX/Poseidon and Jason Equatorial Sea Surface Slope Anomaly in the Atlantic in 2002: Comparison with Wind and Current Measurements at 23W
- Author
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E. Sultan, L. Bunge, Christine Provost, Annie Kartavtseff, Sabine Arnault, and N. Chouaib
- Subjects
Geography ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,010505 oceanography ,Climatology ,Satellite altimetry ,Equator ,Oceanography ,Geodesy ,01 natural sciences ,Pressure gradient ,Sea level ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
A time series of velocity profile in the upper 150 m of the equatorial Atlantic was gathered at 23W in 2002 within the PIRATA program. It constitutes the first time series of near surface current measurements simultaneous with altimetric data in the equatorial Atlantic. The surface slope anomaly along the equator is computed from satellite altimetry, and, as a proxy for the pressure gradient along the equator, compared with the wind and near surface current data. In a first step, a time series of the surface slope anomaly along the equator in the Atlantic is computed from the 10-year-long TOPEX/Poseidon sea level anomalies. A sensitivity study establishes the robustness of the calculation. Apart from a 15 cm bias, the equatorial sea surface slope anomalies estimated either from TOPEX/Poseidon or from Jason over the 6-month overlap (Feb.–Aug. 2002) do not reveal drastic differences. We produce two sea surface slope anomaly composite time series for 2002 (one with T/P data, the other with Jason data during ...
- Published
- 2004
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