Litcius/Paper detail

Annual sea level variations in the Red Sea observed using GNSS

Abdulaziz Alothman, M. S. Bos, Rui Fernandes, Ali M. Radwan, Mohamed Rashwan

2020Geophysical Journal International17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

SUMMARY Annual sea level variations in the Red Sea have amplitudes of 15–20 cm as observed using various techniques such as tide gauges, satellite altimetry and recently Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite data. In this study, we demonstrate that Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) observations can also be used to measure the effect of these sea level variations. The extra water mass presses on the seafloor, which causes horizontal and vertical deformations. Using time-series from 10 coastal GNSS stations, we observe annual horizontal and vertical loading displacements with amplitudes of 2–5 mm. When correcting for atmospheric, hydrological and surface water loading and a residual geocentre motion, significant annual signals of approximately 0.5 and 2 mm are still observed for the horizontal and vertical components, respectively. In the northern Red Sea, the observed annual signals and predicted annual sea level loading show good agreement. This confirms that the signal is mostly a result of the variations in water mass and thermal expansion. Furthermore, we conclude that the uncertainties in the hydrological model over Ethiopia and Eritrea influence the loading over the southern Red Sea, which was underestimated in previous studies using GRACE data.

Topics & Concepts

Tide gaugeGNSS applicationsSea levelGeologyAltimeterSatelliteAmplitudeGeodesyPost-glacial reboundResidualSeafloor spreadingClimatologyWater levelEnvironmental scienceOceanographyGeographyPhysicsEngineeringCartographyComputer scienceAlgorithmAerospace engineeringQuantum mechanicsGeophysics and Gravity MeasurementsGNSS positioning and interferenceOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes