Steric and mass-induced sea level variations in the Mediterranean Sea revisited

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Title: Steric and mass-induced sea level variations in the Mediterranean Sea revisited
Authors: Garcia-Garcia, David | Chao, Benjamin F. | Boy, Jean-Paul
Research Group/s: Geodesia Espacial y Dinámica Espacial
Center, Department or Service: Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Matemática Aplicada | Academia Sinica (Taipei, Taiwan). Institute of Earth Science | NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. Planetary Geodynamics Laboratory
Keywords: Time-variable gravity | Mass-induced sea level variations | Steric sea level variations | Altimetry | Mediterranean Sea | Gibraltar flux
Knowledge Area: Matemática Aplicada
Date Created: 2010
Issue Date: 7-Dec-2010
Publisher: American Geophysical Union
Citation: GARCÍA-GARCÍA, D.; CHAO, B.F.; BOY, J.-P. "Steric and mass-induced sea level variations in the Mediterranean Sea revisited". Journal of Geophysical Research. Vol. 115, C12016 (2010). ISSN 0148-0227, 14 pp.
Abstract: The total sea level variation (SLV) is the combination of steric and mass␣induced SLV, whose exact shares are key to understanding the oceanic response to climate system changes. Total SLV can be observed by radar altimetry satellites such as TOPEX/POSEIDON and Jason 1/2. The steric SLV can be computed through temperature and salinity profiles from in situ measurements or from ocean general circulation models (OGCM), which can assimilate the said observations. The mass-induced SLV can be estimated from its time-variable gravity (TVG) signals. We revisit this problem in the Mediterranean Sea estimating the observed, steric, and mass-induced SLV, for the latter we analyze the latest TVG data set from the GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) satellite mission launched in 2002, which is 3.5 times longer than in previous studies, with the application of a two-stage anisotropic filter to reduce the noise in high-degree and -order spherical harmonic coefficients. We confirm that the intra-annual total SLV are only produced by water mass changes, a fact explained in the literature as a result of the wind field around the Gibraltar Strait. The steric SLV estimated from the residual of “altimetry minus GRACE” agrees in phase with that estimated from OGCMs and in situ measurements, although showing a higher amplitude. The net water fluxes through both the straits of Gibraltar and Sicily have also been estimated accordingly.
Sponsor: This work was elaborated during the stay of the first author at the National Central University of Taiwan, thanks to a grant from the Generalitat Valenciana, Spain. Jean-Paul Boy is currently visiting NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, with a Marie Curie International Outgoing Fellowship (PIOF-GA-2008-221753). This work was partly funded by two Spanish projects from MICIN, ESP2006-11357, and AYA2009-07981 and one from Generalitat Valenciana (ACOMP2009/031).
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/20069
ISSN: 0148-0227
DOI: 10.1029/2009JC005928
Language: eng
Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Rights: © 2010 American Geophysical Union
Peer Review: si
Publisher version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2009JC005928
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