A ship plows through rough seas in the Bering Sea in
the aftermath of Typhoon Tip, one of the largest hurricanes on record. The
Sentinel-6B satellite will provide data crucial to forecasting sea states,
information that can help ships avoid danger.
CC BY 2.0 NOAA/Commander Richard Behn
Sea surface height data from the Sentinel-6B satellite, led by NASA and
ESA, will help with the development of marine weather forecasts, alerting ships
to possible dangers.
Because most global trade travels
by ship, accurate, timely ocean forecasts are essential. These forecasts
provide crucial information about storms, high winds, and rough water, and they
depend on measurements provided by instruments in the ocean and by satellites
including Sentinel-6B, a joint mission led by NASA and ESA (European Space
Agency) that will provide essential sea level and other ocean data after it
launches this November.
The satellite will eventually take
over from its twin, Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich, which launched in 2020. Both satellites have an altimeter instrument that measures sea levels,
wind speeds, and wave heights, among other characteristics, which
meteorologists feed into models that produce marine weather forecasts. Those
forecasts provide information on the state of the ocean as well as the changing
locations of large currents like the Gulf Stream. Dangerous conditions can
result when waves interact with such currents, putting ships at risk.
“Building on NASA’s long legacy of
satellite altimetry data and its real-world impact on shipping operations,
Sentinel-6B will soon take on the vital task of improving ocean and weather
forecasts to help keep ships, their crews, and cargo safe”, said Nadya
Vinogradova Shiffer, lead program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich and
Sentinel-6B are part of the Sentinel-6/Jason-CS (Continuity of Service)
mission, the latest in a series of ocean-observing radar altimetry missions
that have monitored Earth’s changing seas since the early 1990s. Sentinel-6/Jason-CS
is a collaboration between NASA, ESA, the European Union, EUMETSAT (European
Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites), and NOAA (U.S.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration). The European Commission
provided funding support, and the French space agency CNES (Centre National
d’Études Spatiales) contributed technical support.
Keeping
current
“The ocean is getting busier, but
it’s also getting more dangerous,” said Avichal Mehra, deputy director of the
Ocean Prediction Center at the National Weather Service in College Park,
Maryland. He and his colleagues produce marine weather forecasts using data
from ocean-based instruments as well as complementary measurements from five
satellites, including Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich. Among those measurements:
sea level, wave height, and wind speed. The forecasters derive the location of
large currents from changes in sea level.
One of the planet’s major currents,
the Gulf Stream is located off the southeastern coast of the United States, but
its exact position varies. “Ships will actually change course depending on
where the Gulf Stream is and the direction of the waves,” said Mehra. “There
have been instances where, in calm conditions, waves interacting with the Gulf
Stream have caused damage or the loss of cargo containers on ships.”
Large, warm currents like the Gulf
Stream can have relatively sharp boundaries since they are generally higher
than their surroundings. Water expands as it warms, so warm seawater is taller
than cooler water. If waves interact with these currents in a certain way, seas
can become extremely rough, presenting a hazard to even the largest ships.
“Satellite altimeters are the only
reliable measurement we have of where these big currents can be,” said Deirdre
Byrne, sea surface height team lead at NOAA in College Park.
There are hundreds of floating
sensors scattered about the ocean that could pick up parts of where such
currents are located, but these instruments are widely dispersed and limited in
the area they measure at any one time. Satellites like Sentinel-6B offer
greater spatial coverage, measuring areas that aren’t regularly monitored and
providing essential information for the forecasts that ships need.
Consistency is
key
Sentinel-6B won’t just help marine
weather forecasts through its near-real-time data, though. It will also extend
a long-term dataset featuring more than 30 years of sea level measurements,
just as Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich does today.
“Since 1992, we have launched a
series of satellites that have provided consistent sea level observations from
the same orbit in space. This continuity allows each new mission to be
calibrated against its predecessors, providing measurements with centimeter-level
accuracy that don’t drift over time,” said Severine Fournier, Sentinel-6B
deputy project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California.
This long-running, repeated
measurement has turned this dataset into the gold standard sea level
measurement from space — a reference against which data from other sea level
satellites is checked. It also serves as a baseline, giving forecasters a way
to tell what ocean conditions have looked like over time and how they are
changing now. “This kind of data can’t be easily replaced,” said Mehra.
More about
Sentinel-6B
Sentinel-6/Jason-CS was jointly
developed by ESA, EUMETSAT, NASA, and NOAA, with funding support from the
European Commission and technical support from CNES.
A division of Caltech in Pasadena,
JPL contributed three science instruments for each Sentinel-6 satellite:
the Advanced Microwave Radiometer, the Global Navigation Satellite System – Radio Occultation, and the Laser Retroreflector Array. NASA is also contributing launch services, ground
systems supporting operation of the NASA science instruments, the science data
processors for two of these instruments, and support for the U.S. members of
the international Ocean Surface Topography and Sentinel-6 science teams.
For more about Sentinel-6/Jason-CS, visit: https://sealevel.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/jason-cs-sentinel-6
Source: New US-European Sea Level Satellite Will Help Safeguard Ships at Sea - NASA

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