Sea-level fingerprints emergent from GRACE mission data

被引:38
作者
Adhikari, Surendra [1 ]
Ivins, Erik R. [1 ]
Frederikse, Thomas [1 ]
Landerer, Felix W. [1 ]
Caron, Lambert [1 ]
机构
[1] CALTECH, Jet Prop Lab, 4800 Oak Grove Dr, Pasadena, CA 91109 USA
关键词
GLACIAL ISOSTATIC-ADJUSTMENT; SATELLITE ALTIMETRY; POLE TIDE; GRAVITY; VARIABILITY; ANTARCTICA; GIA; CRYOSPHERE; BALANCE; BUDGET;
D O I
10.5194/essd-11-629-2019
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission data have an important, if not revolutionary, impact on how scientists quantify the water transport on the Earth's surface. The transport phenomena include land hydrology, physical oceanography, atmospheric moisture flux, and global cryospheric mass balance. The mass transport observed by the satellite system also includes solid Earth motions caused by, for example, great subduction zone earthquakes and glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) processes. When coupled with altimetry, these space gravimetry data provide a powerful framework for studying climate-related changes on decadal timescales, such as ice mass loss and sea-level rise. As the changes in the latter are significant over the past two decades, there is a concomitant self-attraction and loading phenomenon generating ancillary changes in gravity, sea surface, and solid Earth deformation. These generate a finite signal in GRACE and ocean altimetry, and it may often be desirable to isolate and remove them for the purpose of understanding, for example, ocean circulation changes and post-seismic viscoelastic mantle flow, or GIA, occurring beneath the seafloor. Here we perform a systematic calculation of sea-level fingerprints of on-land water mass changes using monthly Release-06 GRACE Level-2 Stokes coefficients for the span April 2002 to August 2016, which result in a set of solutions for the time-varying geoid, sea-surface height, and vertical bedrock motion. We provide both spherical harmonic coefficients and spatial maps of these global field variables and uncertainties therein (https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/8UC8IR; Adhikari et al., 2019). Solutions are provided for three official GRACE data processing centers, namely the University of Texas Austin's Center for Space Research (CSR), GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam (GFZ), and Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), with and without rotational feedback included and in both the center-of-mass and center-of-figure reference frames. These data may be applied for either study of the fields themselves or as fundamental filter components for the analysis of ocean-circulation- and earthquake-related fields or for improving ocean tide models. (C) 2019 California Institute of Technology.
引用
收藏
页码:629 / 646
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Holocene sea-level database from the Atlantic coast of Europe
    Garcia-Artola, Ane
    Stephan, Pierre
    Cearreta, Alejandro
    Kopp, Robert E.
    Khan, Nicole S.
    Horton, Benjamin P.
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2018, 196 : 177 - 192
  • [42] Combination of sea-level observations and an oceanographic model for geodetic applications in the Baltic sea
    Novotny, K
    Liebsch, G
    Dietrich, R
    Lehmann, A
    WINDOW ON THE FUTURE OF GEODESY, 2005, 128 : 195 - 200
  • [43] Sea-level extremes of meteorological origin in the Red Sea
    Antony, Charls
    Langodan, Sabique
    Dasari, Hari Prasad
    Abualnaja, Yasser
    Hoteit, Ibrahim
    WEATHER AND CLIMATE EXTREMES, 2022, 35
  • [44] The use of gravimetric data from GRACE mission in the understanding of polar motion variations
    Seoane, L.
    Nastula, J.
    Bizouard, C.
    Gambis, D.
    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 2009, 178 (02) : 614 - 622
  • [45] A Holocene relative sea-level database for the Baltic Sea
    Rosentau, Alar
    Klemann, Volker
    Bennike, Ole
    Steffen, Holger
    Wehr, Jasmin
    Latinovic, Milena
    Bagge, Meike
    Ojala, Antti
    Berglund, Mikael
    Becher, Gustaf Peterson
    Schoning, Kristian
    Hansson, Anton
    Nielsen, Lars
    Clemmensen, Lars B.
    Hede, Mikkel U.
    Kroon, Aart
    Pejrup, Morten
    Sander, Lasse
    Stattegger, Karl
    Schwarzer, Klaus
    Lampe, Reinhard
    Lampe, Matthias
    Uscinowicz, Szymon
    Bitinas, Albertas
    Grudzinska, Ieva
    Vassiljev, Jueri
    Nirgi, Triine
    Kublitskiy, Yuriy
    Subetto, Dmitry
    QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2021, 266
  • [46] Sea-level trend in the South China Sea observed from 20 years of along-track satellite altimetric data
    Cheng, Yongcun
    Xu, Qing
    Andersen, Ole Baltazar
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF REMOTE SENSING, 2014, 35 (11-12) : 4329 - 4339
  • [47] Identifying the causes of sea-level change
    Milne, Glenn A.
    Gehrels, W. Roland
    Hughes, Chris W.
    Tamisiea, Mark E.
    NATURE GEOSCIENCE, 2009, 2 (07) : 471 - 478
  • [48] Reciprocity and sensitivity kernels for sea level fingerprints
    Al-Attar, D.
    Syvret, F.
    Crawford, O.
    Mitrovica, J. X.
    Lloyd, A. J.
    GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 2023, 236 (01) : 362 - 378
  • [49] On Sea-Level Change in Coastal Areas
    Courtillot, Vincent
    Le Mouel, Jean-Louis
    Lopes, Fernando
    Gibert, Dominique
    JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2022, 10 (12)
  • [50] Long-Term and Decadal Sea-Level Trends of the Baltic Sea Using Along-Track Satellite Altimetry
    Mostafavi, Majid
    Ellmann, Artu
    Delpeche-Ellmann, Nicole
    REMOTE SENSING, 2024, 16 (05)