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RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES VOL. 9, ES3003, doi:10.2205/2007ES000283, 2007

Interannual trends in the Southern Ocean sea surface temperature and sea level from remote sensing data

S. A. Lebedev1, 2

1Geophysical Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia
2State Oceanographic Institute, Moscow, Russia


Abstract

[1]  As it was shown recently, climate changes in Antarctica resulted in interannual trends of some climatic parameters like sea level atmospheric pressure, surface air temperature, ice thickness and others. These tendencies have effect on the Southern Ocean meteorological and hydrological regime. The following remote sensing data: AVHRR MCSST data, satellite altimetry data (merged data of mission ERS-2, TOPEX/Poseidon, Jason-1, ENVISAT, GFO-1) are used to analyze the interannual and/or climatic tendency of sea surface temperature (SST) and sea level anomaly (SLA). According to the obtained results, SST has positive trend 0.01 pm 0.005o C yr -1 within 300-1000 km band northward of the Antarctic coast and negative trend -0.02pm 0.003 o C yr -1 on average for the Southern Ocean for 24-yr record (1982-2005). SLA has interannual trend 0.24 pm 0.026 cm yr -1 for 12-yr record (1993-2005). However in some areas (for example, Pacific-Antarctic Ridge) SST and SLA tendencies are stronger -0.065 pm 0.007 o C yr -1 and -0.21 pm 0.05 cm yr -1, respectively.

Received 28 November 2007; accepted 18 December 2007; published 24 December 2007.

Keywords: sea level, sea surface temperature, southern ocean, satellite altimetry, IR radiometry, interannual trend.

Index Terms: 4260 Oceanography: General: Ocean data assimilation and reanalysis; 4556 Oceanography: Physical: Sea level: variations and mean; 4594 Oceanography: Physical: Instruments and techniques.


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Citation: Lebedev, S. A. (2007), Interannual trends in the Southern Ocean sea surface temperature and sea level from remote sensing data, Russ. J. Earth Sci., 9, ES3003, doi:10.2205/2007ES000283.

Copyright 2007 by the Russian Journal of Earth Sciences
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