Located off the coast of Ecuador, Paramount seamount
is among the kinds of ocean floor features that certain ocean-observing
satellites like SWOT can detect by how their gravitational pull affects the sea
surface.
NOAA Okeanos Explorer Program
More accurate maps based on data from the SWOT mission can improve
underwater navigation and result in greater knowledge of how heat and life move
around the world’s ocean.
There are better maps of the Moon’s
surface than of the bottom of Earth’s ocean. Researchers have been working for
decades to change that. As part of the ongoing effort, a NASA-supported team
recently published one of the most detailed maps yet of the ocean floor, using
data from the SWOT (Surface Water and Ocean Topography) satellite, a
collaboration between NASA and the French space agency CNES (Centre National
d’Études Spatiales).
Ships outfitted with sonar instruments can make direct, incredibly detailed measurements of the ocean floor. But to date, only about 25% of it has been surveyed in this way. To produce a global picture of the seafloor, researchers have relied on satellite data.
This animation shows seafloor features derived
from SWOT data on regions off Mexico, South America, and the Antarctic
Peninsula. Purple denotes regions that are lower relative to higher areas like
seamounts, depicted in green. Eötvös is the unit of measure for the
gravity-based data used to create these maps.
NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
Why Seafloor Maps Matter
More accurate maps of the ocean
floor are crucial for a range of seafaring activities, including navigation and
laying underwater communications cables. “Seafloor mapping is key in both
established and emerging economic opportunities, including rare-mineral seabed
mining, optimizing shipping routes, hazard detection, and seabed warfare
operations,” said Nadya Vinogradova Shiffer, head of physical oceanography
programs at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
Accurate seafloor maps are also important for an improved understanding of deep-sea currents and tides, which affect life in the abyss, as well as geologic processes like plate tectonics. Underwater mountains called seamounts and other ocean floor features like their smaller cousins, abyssal hills, influence the movement of heat and nutrients in the deep sea and can attract life. The effects of these physical features can even be felt at the surface by the influence they exert on ecosystems that human communities depend on.
Mapping the seafloor isn’t the SWOT mission’s primary purpose. Launched in December
2022, the satellite measures the height of water on nearly all of Earth’s
surface, including the ocean, lakes, reservoirs, and rivers. Researchers can
use these differences in height to create a kind of topographic map of the
surface of fresh- and seawater. This data can then be used for tasks such as
assessing changes in sea ice or tracking how floods progress down a river.
“The SWOT satellite was a huge jump
in our ability to map the seafloor,” said David Sandwell, a geophysicist at
Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California. He’s used
satellite data to chart the bottom of the ocean since the 1990s and was one of
the researchers responsible for the SWOT-based seafloor map, which was published in the journal Science in December 2024.
How It Works
The study authors relied on the
fact that because geologic features like seamounts and abyssal hills have more
mass than their surroundings, they exert a slightly stronger gravitational pull
that creates small, measurable bumps in the sea surface above them. These
subtle gravity signatures help researchers predict the kind of seafloor feature
that produced them.
Through repeated observations —
SWOT covers about 90% of the globe every 21 days — the satellite is sensitive
enough to pick up these minute differences, with centimeter-level accuracy, in
sea surface height caused by the features below. Sandwell and his colleagues
used a year’s worth of SWOT data to focus on seamounts, abyssal hills, and
underwater continental margins, where continental crust meets oceanic crust.
Previous ocean-observing satellites
have detected massive versions of these bottom features, such as seamounts over
roughly 3,300 feet (1 kilometer) tall. The SWOT satellite can pick up seamounts
less than half that height, potentially increasing the number of known
seamounts from 44,000 to 100,000. These underwater mountains stick up into the
water, influencing deep sea currents. This can concentrate nutrients along
their slopes, attracting organisms and creating oases on what would otherwise
be barren patches of seafloor.
Looking Into
the Abyss
The improved view from SWOT also
gives researchers more insight into the geologic history of the planet.
“Abyssal hills are the most
abundant landform on Earth, covering about 70% of the ocean floor,” said Yao
Yu, an oceanographer at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and lead author on
the paper. “These hills are only a few kilometers wide, which makes them hard
to observe from space. We were surprised that SWOT could see them so well.”
Abyssal hills form in parallel
bands, like the ridges on a washboard, where tectonic plates spread apart. The
orientation and extent of the bands can reveal how tectonic plates have moved
over time. Abyssal hills also interact with tides and deep ocean currents in
ways that researchers don’t fully understand yet.
The researchers have extracted
nearly all the information on seafloor features they expected to find in the
SWOT measurements. Now they’re focusing on refining their picture of the ocean
floor by calculating the depth of the features they see. The work complements
an effort by the international scientific community to map the entire seafloor
using ship-based sonar by 2030. “We won’t get the full ship-based mapping done
by then,” said Sandwell. “But SWOT will help us fill it in, getting us close to
achieving the 2030 objective.”
More About
SWOT
The SWOT satellite was jointly
developed by NASA and CNES, with contributions from the Canadian Space Agency
(CSA) and the UK Space Agency. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, managed for
the agency by Caltech in Pasadena, California, leads the U.S. component of the
project. For the flight system payload, NASA provided the Ka-band radar
interferometer (KaRIn) instrument, a GPS science receiver, a laser
retroreflector, a two-beam microwave radiometer, and NASA instrument
operations. The Doppler Orbitography and Radioposition Integrated by Satellite
system, the dual frequency Poseidon altimeter (developed by Thales Alenia
Space), the KaRIn radio-frequency subsystem (together with Thales Alenia Space
and with support from the UK Space Agency), the satellite platform, and ground
operations were provided by CNES. The KaRIn high-power transmitter assembly was
provided by CSA.
To learn more about SWOT, visit: https://swot.jpl.nasa.gov
By: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Source: Next-Generation Water Satellite Maps Seafloor From Space - NASA
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