Observing small-scale ocean surface dynamics and vertical ocean processes in coastal, shelf and polar seas with the Earth Explorer 11 SEASTAR mission candidate.

crossref(2022)

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摘要
<p>High-resolution satellite images of sea surface temperature and ocean colour reveal an abundance of ocean fronts, swirls, vortices and filaments at horizontal scales below 10 km that permeate the global ocean, especially near mesoscale jets and eddies, in coastal seas and close to sea ice margins. These small-scale ocean features are the fingerprints of dynamic atmosphere-ocean interactions and intense ocean vertical processes that mediate exchanges across all the fundamental interfaces of the Earth System &#8211; between the atmosphere, the ocean surface, the ocean interior, the cryosphere and land &#8211; and impact major aspects of the global climate system.</p><p>Numerous research studies and high-impact scientific publications confirm the key role of submesoscale processes in air-sea interactions, upper-ocean mixing, lateral transports and vertical exchanges with the ocean interior. Small-scale processes also visibly dominate in coastal, shelf seas and polar seas - regions of disproportionally high strategic and societal value as hosts to numerous human activities and natural resources. This paper will review some of the evidence about the fundamental role of small-scale ocean dynamics in the Earth System, making the case for new observations from space to characterise these important phenomena. The contribution ends by outlining the science drivers and objectives of the SEASTAR satellite candidate mission currently under study as one of four candidates to the European Space Agency Earth Explorer 11 programme.</p>
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