Barystatic and manometric mass variations in sea level based on gravimetry
Barystatic and manometric sea level changes represent the mass component of sea level changes at global and regional scales respectively. Barystatic and manometric sea level changes are estimated here using the satellite gravimetry measurements from the GRACE and GRACE-FO missions.
Two products are distributed over the April 2002 to August 2022 period:
- Barystatic sea level changes from satellite gravimetry with uncertainties at 1-sigma: monthly time series,
- Manometric sea level changes from satellite gravimetry with uncertainties at 1-sigma: monthly grids with 1x1 degree.
BARYSTATIC sea level changes are due to freshwater exchanges with the continents, including ice mass changes from Greenland, Antarctica and continental glaciers, as well as freshwater fluxes from continental areas (i.e. large river basins such as the Amazon or Mississippi).
MANOMETRIC sea level changes are due to several processes, including the atmosphere - ocean circulation, sea level fingerprints or global water cycle. Climate modes, such as the El Nino Southern Oscillation, Arctic Oscillation, North Atlantic Oscillation or Southern Annular Mode, have also been shown to significantly influence manometric sea level changes (e.g. Pfeffer et al., 2022).
The GRACE and GRACE Follow-On missions monitor the time-variations in the gravity field almost continuously since 2002. Numerous centers distribute time-lapse solutions of the Earth’s gravitational potential, delivered as Stokes coefficients, known as Level 2 solutions. The Level 2 solutions need to be corrected for several geophysical effects and instrumental errors, converted into surface mass anomalies and projected onto the ellipsoid. The resulting gridded surface mass anomalies with appropriate corrections applied are referred to as Level 3 solutions. Several sources of errors affect the solutions of Level 2 and 3, imposed by the satellite configuration, instrumental errors and uncertainties in the geophysical corrections used to process the measurements. We use the ensemble approach of Blazquez et al., (2018), to robustly estimate the manometric and barystatic sea level changes and their uncertainties.
References:
- Blazquez, A., Meyssignac, B., Lemoine, J.-M., Berthier, E., Ribes, A., Cazenave, A. (2018). Exploring the uncertainty in GRACE estimates of the mass redistributions at the Earth surface: implications for the global water and sea level budgets, Geophysical Journal International, 215 (1), 415–430, https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggy293
- Pfeffer, J., Cazenave, A. & Barnoud, A. (2022). Analysis of the interannual variability in satellite gravity solutions: detection of climate modes fingerprints in water mass displacements across continents and oceans. Clim Dyn 58, 1065–1084. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-021-05953-z
Simple
Identification info
- Date (Creation)
- 2023-04-27
- Date (Publication)
- 2023-08-22
- Credit
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E.U. Copernicus Marine Service/Magellium/LEGOS/AVISO+
- Point of contact
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Organisation Individual Electronic mail address ORCID Role CNES
AVISO+
Point of contact AVISO+
Publisher Magellium
Originator E.U. Copernicus Marine Service
Funder LEGOS
Originator
- Spatial representation type
- Grid
Spatial resolution
- Spatial resolution
- 1 degree
- Topic category
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- Oceans
Extent
Extent
- Time period
- 2002-04-15 2023-09-30
Vertical element
- Minimum value
- 0
- Maximum value
- 0
Resource format
- Title
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NetCDF-4
- Date
- Edition
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CF1.7
- Centre de données ODATIS
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CDS-AVISO
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- Type de jeux de donnée ODATIS
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/Observational data/satellite
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- Thèmatiques ODATIS
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Remote sensing
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Added-value products
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- Keywords
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Manometric sea level anomalies
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- Cersat - GCMD parameter
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/Sea Surface Topography/Sea Surface Height
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- ODATIS aggregation parameters and Essential Variable names
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Sea surface height
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Resource constraints
- Use limitation
- Open Licence
- Access constraints
- Other restrictions
- Use constraints
- Other restrictions
- Other constraints
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This work is supported by CMEMS (Copernicus Marine Environment Monitoring Service) in the framework of the WAMBOR (WAter Mass Balance in Ocean Reanalyses) project: https://marine.copernicus.eu/about/research-development-projects/2022-2024/WAMBOR. CMEMS is implemented by Mercator Ocean International in the framework of a delegation agreement with the European Union. Citation: If you use the data, please cite: "The barystatic and manometric products from satellite gravimetry (DOI: 10.24400/527896/a01-2023.011) were produced by Magellium/LEGOS and distributed by AVISO+ (https://aviso.altimetry.fr) with support from Copernicus Marine Service. "
Associated resource
- Association Type
- Cross reference
- Language
- Français
- Character encoding
- UTF8
Content Information
- Processing level code
- L4
Distribution Information
- Distribution format
-
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NetCDF-4
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- OnLine resource
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Plus d'information sur AVISO+
- OnLine resource
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Accès authentifié aux données via HTTPS
Authenticated access through FTP
- OnLine resource
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Manometric sea level anomalies estimated with GRACE and GRACE-FO
THREDDS
- OnLine resource
-
DOI du jeu de données
DOI dataset
- OnLine resource
-
Barystatic sea level anomalies estimated with GRACE and GRACE-FO
THREDDS
- OnLine resource
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Variations de masse barystatiques et manométriques du niveau marin à partir du bilan du niveau marin
Linked to
- OnLine resource
-
Manuel utilisateur
User handbook
- OnLine resource
-
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
Resource lineage
- Statement
-
BARYSTATIC sea level changes are due to freshwater exchanges with the continents, including ice mass changes from Greenland, Antarctica and continental glaciers, as well as freshwater fluxes from continental areas (i.e. large river basins such as the Amazon or Mississippi).
MANOMETRIC sea level changes are due to several processes, including the atmosphere - ocean circulation, sea level fingerprints or global water cycle. Climate modes, such as the El Nino Southern Oscillation, Arctic Oscillation, North Atlantic Oscillation or Southern Annular Mode, have also been shown to significantly influence manometric sea level changes (e.g. Pfeffer et al., 2022).
The GRACE and GRACE Follow-On missions monitor the time-variations in the gravity field almost continuously since 2002. Numerous centers distribute time-lapse solutions of the Earth’s gravitational potential, delivered as Stokes coefficients, known as Level 2 solutions. The Level 2 solutions need to be corrected for several geophysical effects and instrumental errors, converted into surface mass anomalies and projected onto the ellipsoid. The resulting gridded surface mass anomalies with appropriate corrections applied are referred to as Level 3 solutions. Several sources of errors affect the solutions of Level 2 and 3, imposed by the satellite configuration, instrumental errors and uncertainties in the geophysical corrections used to process the measurements. We use the ensemble approach of Blazquez et al., (2018), to robustly estimate the manometric and barystatic sea level changes and their uncertainties.
References:
- Blazquez, A., Meyssignac, B., Lemoine, J.-M., Berthier, E., Ribes, A., Cazenave, A. (2018). Exploring the uncertainty in GRACE estimates of the mass redistributions at the Earth surface: implications for the global water and sea level budgets, Geophysical Journal International, 215 (1), 415–430, https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggy293
- Pfeffer, J., Cazenave, A. & Barnoud, A. (2022). Analysis of the interannual variability in satellite gravity solutions: detection of climate modes fingerprints in water mass displacements across continents and oceans. Clim Dyn 58, 1065–1084. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-021-05953-z
- Hierarchy level
- Dataset
Spatial representation info
- Geometric object type
- Complex
Reference System Information
- Reference system identifier
- EPSG/WGS 84 (EPSG:4326)
Metadata
- Metadata identifier
- urn:uuid/2e0dbbed-440a-412a-a9b9-5644299d1575
- Language
- Français
- Character encoding
- UTF8
- Language
- English
- Character encoding
- UTF8
Type of resource
- Resource type
- Dataset
- Metadata linkage
-
https://sextant.ifremer.fr/geonetwork/srv/api/records/2e0dbbed-440a-412a-a9b9-5644299d1575
- Date info (Creation)
- 2023-12-06T14:16:52.124Z
- Date info (Revision)
- 2024-10-15T14:41:56.55048Z
Metadata standard
- Title
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ISO 19115-3:2018 - Remote Sensing
- Edition
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1.0