12th Conference on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography
12th Conference on Interactions of the Sea and Atmosphere

JP4.13

Variability of skin - bulk sea surface temperature difference

Stephen Hallsworth, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Mid Lothian, United Kingdom

Satellites can retrieve the ocean skin-layer temperature with good spatial coverage. The skin layer (~1micrometre thick) determines latent and sensible heat fluxes between the ocean and the atmosphere. However, climate and weather prediction models, with the bulk skin difference already included in the flux parametersations, require bulk sea surface temperatures (SST at ~1 metre depth) that represent heat content.

The satellite sensitive skin layer can be related to the bulk SST at nighttime using existing parameteristions. During the daytime however, solar radiation warms the ocean surface and when low wind conditions are present, a stratified deck layer is formed. A one dimensional turbulence model is used to resolve the skin-bulk temperature difference during the day.

Data from moorings is compared with thermal and visible satellite data and a one dimensional ocean turbulence model is used to investigate SST on diurnal timescales. This research brings together data from diverse sources and combines them with numerical modelling to create a procedure for obtaining sea surface temperatures with good spatial and temporal coverage.

Joint Poster Session 4, Air-Sea and QuikSCAT Applications (Joint Poster Session between 12 Conference on Satellite Meteorology and 12th Conference on Interactions of the Sea and Atmosphere)
Wednesday, 12 February 2003, 3:30 PM-5:30 PM

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