Sunlight glints off one of the solar panels of the
SWOT satellite in this artist’s concept. The antennas of the mission’s key
instrument — the Ka-band Radar Interferometer (KaRIn) — collect data along a
swath 30 miles (50 kilometers) wide on either side of the satellite.
CNES
In a first, a space mission led by NASA
and France has tracked Earth’s rivers swelling and shrinking from month to
month over the course of a year and found significantly less of a swing than
previous model-based estimates. A record drought in the Amazon likely
influenced the tally made by the Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT)
satellite. The findings also reveal new details about the underwater topography
of the world’s river channels.
Launched in 2022, SWOT is a collaboration between NASA
and the French space agency CNES (Centre National d’Études Spatiales). It is
the first satellite capable of surveying not only the ocean, but also nearly
all the world’s lakes and rivers with ultraprecision. While SWOT does not
measure the absolute volume of rivers, it can track their width, surface
height, and slope changing over time.
Traditionally, hydrologists have relied
on models to calculate river storage changes, or they multiplied altimeter
estimates of height by optical or radar estimates of width. In contrast, SWOT
measures both dimensions, height and width, at the same time using its
sensitive Ka-band Radar Interferometer (KaRIn) instrument to bounce microwaves off the water’s surface
and time how long the signal takes to return. The new study, published Wednesday in Nature, analyzed nearly 1.6 million such
observations.
The analysis paints a picture of some 127,000 river segments rising and falling between October 2023 and September 2024. In aggregate, river volumes varied by almost 83 trillion gallons (313 cubic kilometers). That’s about 28% less of a swing than the lowest previous estimates, a result likely skewed by extremely dry conditions during that period in the Amazon, home to Earth’s largest river by volume.
Earth’s rivers pulse like capilleries in this visualization using data
from the SWOT mission. The world tour zooms in on iconic rivers including the
Amazon, which in the span of a year gained and lost enough water to fill 68
million Olympic-size swimming pools.
NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
New way to map river channels
Even gripped by drought, the Amazon
River varied more than any other during the year, gaining and losing more than
45 trillion gallons (172 cubic kilometers) — enough to cover the entire state
of California in more than a foot of water.
More surprisingly, the world’s
longest river, the Nile, varied less than expected, with volumes changing by
only 2.2 trillion gallons (8.5 cubic kilometers). Possible explanations include
upstream damming and severe drought, along with challenges that come with
learning to work with a new satellite instrument.
Cedric David, who leads the SWOT
research team that conducted the work at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Southern California, said the findings are a first look and the role of large
floodplain dynamics remain to be fully determined. Still, such an accounting
has been elusive until now. River gauges are sparse in areas, and some channels
too remote for boat and ground surveys. Longstanding questions, such as how
fast do rivers flow and how much rainwater and snowmelt runs into them, have
added to the uncertainty.
“We’re starting to untangle some of
the really tough questions SWOT was built for,” David said. “This is just the
beginning.”
Tracking rivers as they swell and
shrink is also helping scientists visualize something that can be challenging
to survey in person: the underlying shape of riverbanks and beds. Such contours
influence everything from shipping to flooding but have remained largely
unmapped in many places, noted Arnaud Cerbelaud, a postdoctoral research fellow
at JPL who co-led the study.
The new SWOT data provides a window
into river channels ranging from concave to convex, steep to gentle, and stable
to highly variable. In the Amazon, Mississippi, Orinoco, Yangtze, Ganges,
Mekong and Yenisei rivers, for example, observed water levels vary by more than
32 feet (10 meters) from peak to trough.
“The implications go far beyond hydrology and will help us understand how water moves through the global Earth system,” Cerbelaud said.
Source: US-French Satellite Takes Stock of World’s River Water - NASA

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