Authors
PJ Minnett, Aida Alvera-Azcárate, TM Chin, GK Corlett, CL Gentemann, Ioanna Karagali, X Li, A Marsouin, S Marullo, E Maturi, R Santoleri, S Saux Picart, M Steele, J Vazquez-Cuervo
Publication date
2019/11/1
Journal
Remote Sensing of Environment
Volume
233
Pages
111366
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Sea-surface temperature (SST) was one of the first ocean variables to be studied from earth observation satellites. Pioneering images from infrared scanning radiometers revealed the complexity of the surface temperature fields, but these were derived from radiance measurements at orbital heights and included the effects of the intervening atmosphere. Corrections for the effects of the atmosphere to make quantitative estimates of the SST became possible when radiometers with multiple infrared channels were deployed in 1979. At the same time, imaging microwave radiometers with SST capabilities were also flown. Since then, SST has been derived from infrared and microwave radiometers on polar orbiting satellites and from infrared radiometers on geostationary spacecraft. As the performances of satellite radiometers and SST retrieval algorithms improved, accurate, global, high resolution, frequently sampled …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PJ Minnett, A Alvera-Azcárate, TM Chin, GK Corlett… - Remote Sensing of Environment, 2019