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The Resolution of Seamount Geoid Anomalies Achieved by the SARAL AltiKa and Envisat RA2 Satellite Radar Altimeters
Title | The Resolution of Seamount Geoid Anomalies Achieved by the SARAL AltiKa and Envisat RA2 Satellite Radar Altimeters |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2015 |
Authors | Smith, WHF |
Journal | Marine GeodesyMar. Geod.Mar. Geod. |
Pagination | 00-00 |
ISBN Number | 0149-0419 |
Keywords | altimetry, GEBCO, seafloor mapping, seamount |
Abstract | AbstractThe resolution of seamount geoid anomalies by the SARAL AltiKa Ka-band radar altimeter is compared to that of the Envisat RA-2 Ku-band altimeter using cross-spectral analysis of exact-repeat profiles. Noise spectra show white noise floors at root-mean-square levels around 8 mm per root-Hz for AltiKa and 19 mm per root-Hz for RA2, and are colored at wavelengths longer than a few km, with a spectral hump similar to that seen in Jason-2 data. The AltiKa noise level is lower than the RA-2 noise level by more than one would expect from the ratio of their pulse repetition frequencies. Large outliers are present in data from both altimeters, always of one sign (range too long), and show little correlation with rain or other error flags. Seamount anomaly signal to noise ratios are 30 to 10 dB for AltiKa and 3 to 8 dB less for RA2, decreasing as seamount size decreases. Seamounts as small as 1.35 km tall are resolved by both instruments, with significantly better performance by AltiKa due to its lower noise level. If AltiKa can fly a geodetic mission, it will find many presently unknown seamounts. |
Short Title | Marine GeodesyMarine Geodesy |
Alternate Journal | Marine Geodesy |