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Satellite-based time-series of sea-surface temperature since 1980 for climate applications

Owen Embury, Christopher J. Merchant, Simon Good, Nick A Rayner, Jacob L. Høyer, Chris Atkinson, T. Block, Emy Alerskans, K. J. Pearson, Mark Worsfold, Niall McCarroll, Craig Donlon

2024Scientific Data79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract A 42-year climate data record of global sea surface temperature (SST) covering 1980 to 2021 has been produced from satellite observations, with a high degree of independence from in situ measurements. Observations from twenty infrared and two microwave radiometers are used, and are adjusted for their differing times of day of measurement to avoid aliasing and ensure observational stability. A total of 1.5 × 10 13 locations are processed, yielding 1.4 × 10 12 SST observations deemed to be suitable for climate applications. The corresponding observation density varies from less than 1 km −2 yr −1 in 1980 to over 100 km −2 yr −1 after 2007. Data are provided at their native resolution, averaged on a global 0.05° latitude-longitude grid (single-sensor with gaps), and as a daily, merged, gap-free, SST analysis at 0.05°. The data include the satellite-based SSTs, the corresponding time-and-depth standardised estimates, their standard uncertainty and quality flags. Accuracy, spatial coverage and length of record are all improved relative to a previous version, and the timeseries is routinely extended in time using consistent methods.

Topics & Concepts

Sea surface temperatureSatelliteEnvironmental scienceClimatologyRadiometerLatitudeLongitudeRemote sensingMeteorologyAdvanced very-high-resolution radiometerGeodesyGeographyGeologyAerospace engineeringEngineeringClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsOceanographic and Atmospheric Processes
Satellite-based time-series of sea-surface temperature since 1980 for climate applications | Litcius