Anticipated Capabilities of the ODYSEA Wind and Current Mission Concept to Estimate Wind Work at the Air–Sea Interface

Author:

Torres Hector1,Wineteer Alexander1,Klein Patrice23,Lee Tong1ORCID,Wang Jinbo1,Rodriguez Ernesto1ORCID,Menemenlis Dimitris1ORCID,Zhang Hong1

Affiliation:

1. Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91109, USA

2. Environmental Science and Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA

3. LMD/IPSL, CNRS, Ecole Normale Supérieure, PSL Research University, 75005 Paris, France

Abstract

The kinetic energy transfer between the atmosphere and oceans, called wind work, affects ocean dynamics, including near-inertial oscillations and internal gravity waves, mesoscale eddies, and large-scale zonal jets. For the most part, the recent numerical estimates of global wind work amplitude are almost five times larger than those reported 10 years ago. This large increase is explained by the impact of the broad range of spatial and temporal scales covered by winds and currents, the smallest of which has only recently been uncovered by increasingly high-resolution modeling efforts. However, existing satellite observations do not fully sample this broad range of scales. The present study assesses the capabilities of ODYSEA, a conceptual satellite mission to estimate the amplitude of wind work in the global ocean. To this end, we use an ODYSEA measurement simulator fed by the outputs of a km scale coupled ocean–atmosphere model to estimate wind work globally. The results indicate that compared with numerical truth estimates, the ODYSEA instrument performs well globally, except for latitudes north of 40∘N during summer due to unresolved storm evolution. This performance is explained by the wide-swath properties of ODYSEA (a 1700 km wide swath with 5 km posting for winds and surface currents), its twice-a-day (daily) coverage at mid-latitudes (low latitudes), and the insensitivity of the wind work to uncorrelated errors in the estimated wind and current.

Funder

Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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