Science & Applications>Sea surface salinity

Sea surface salinity

The ocean suface salinity is a fundamental parameter to better understand and predict ocean circulation, water cycle, climate and their interactions. Measuring this parameter from space is also a huge technical challenge, and two experimental missions will atempt to achieve this goal in the coming years : SMOS (ESA mission to be launched in September 2009) and AQUARIUS (NASA/Argentina mission to be launched in 2010). CERSAT is highly involved in this challenge, as an expert support laboratory for ESA and also as a processing and archiving center for SMOS mission, through the CATDS (Centre Aval de Traitement des Données SMOS) supported by CNES.

Sea Surface Salinity measured from space for the first time !

A new method was developed that combine C and X-band brightness temperature measurements over the ocean to retrieve for the first time salinity is from satellite microwave radiometer measurements It provides a mean for monitoring salinity in the Amazon plume and it is very encouraging for future L-band radiometry from space.