SWOT AdAC Consortium
  • About
  • Science
  • Campaigns
    • Offshore
        Ship
        • ACC-SMST
        • AUSWOT
        • BioSWOT- Med
        • C-SWOT-2023
        • CONWEST-DYCO
        • FaSt-SWOT
        • MAB-SWOT
        • Marmara Sea
        • New Caledonia
        • North West Australia Shelf
        • Norwegian Sea, Lofoten Basin
        • QUICCHE
        • S-MODE
        • SONETT
        • South China Sea and western Pacific
        • SWOT-Abrolhos
        Infrastructure
        • Bass Strait, Southern Ocean (SOTS) and Great Barrier Reef (Davies Reef)
        • California Cal/Val
        • Hecate Strait and Dixon Entrance
        • Labrador Sea mesoscale campaigns
        • MAEVA-SWOT
        • North West Pacific
        • Patagonian Continental Shelf
    • Coastal/estuary
      • Baie de Veys and Raz Blanchard
      • CONWEST-DYCO
      • Elbe Estuary and Western Baltic Coast
      • Guayas Estuary
      • Komo Estuary, Gabon
      • St. Lawrence Estuary
      • SWOT UK: Bristol Channel and Severn Estuary
  • Community
    • Steering Group
    • Apply
    • Early Career Researchers
  • Intranet
    • List of campaigns
  • News
    • News
    • Campaign Blogs
    • FilaChange workshop
      • Hobart
      • Paris
      • Providence
      • Qingdao
      • Virtual Poster Session
      • Summary Day 1 FilaChange
      • Summary Day 2 FilaChange
  • Resources
    • Request Oceanic Products
    • SWOT AdAC products access
    • Global Drifter Program
    • EuroSea OSSEs tool
    • Oceanliner tool
    • SPASSO
  • Log In
Search

March 25, 2023

Share:

SWOT reveals first stunning views

On Friday 24 March NASA released the first images of Earth’s surface water gathered with SWOT’s Ka-band Radar Interferometer (KaRIn). A first taste of the detailed perspectives that this cutting-edge instrument will be able to capture.

Sea Surface Height anomaly data acquired by SWOT’s KaRIn (left) and Sea Surface Height Anomaly data from 7 active nadir altimeter missions (right). Credits: NASA.

From NASA website:

As seen in these early images, on Jan. 21, 2023, SWOT measured sea level in a part of the Gulf Stream off the coast of North Carolina and Virginia. The two antennas of SWOT’s Ka-band Radar Interferometer (KaRIn) instrument acquired data that was mapped as a pair of wide, colored strips spanning a total of 75 miles (120 kilometers) across. Red and orange areas in the images represent sea levels that are higher than the global average, while the shades of blue represent sea levels that are lower than average.

For comparison, the new data is shown alongside sea surface height data taken by space-based instruments called altimeters. The instruments – widely used to measure sea level – also bounce radar signals off of Earth’s surface to collect their measurements. But traditional altimeters are able to look only at a narrow beam of Earth directly beneath them, unlike KaRIn’s two wide-swath strips that observe sea level as a two-dimensional map.

The spatial resolution of SWOT ocean measurements is 10 times greater than the composite of sea surface height data gathered over the same area by seven other satellites: Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich, Jason-3, Sentinel-3A and 3B, Cryosat-2, Altika, and Hai Yang 2B. The composite image was created using information from the Copernicus Marine Service of ESA (European Space Agency) and shows the same day as the SWOT data.

KaRIn also measured the elevation of water features on Long Island – shown as bright pink splotches nestled within the landscape. (Purple, yellow, green, and blue shades represent different land elevations.)

Read the full article on NASA website.

FOLLOW US
© 2023 SWOT AdAC Consortium. All rights reserved.