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Calibration Altimeter Sites at Cape of Begur and Ibiza Island

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dc.creator Martínez Benjamín, Juan José
dc.creator Martínez García, Marina
dc.creator Ortiz Castellón, Miquel Angel
dc.creator Rodríguez Velasco, Gema
dc.creator Martín Dávila, José
dc.creator Gárate Pasquín, Jorge
dc.creator Bonnefond, Pascal
dc.creator Pérez Gómez, Begoña
dc.creator García Silva, Cristina
dc.date 2008-05-23T10:17:01Z
dc.date 2008-05-23T10:17:01Z
dc.date 2005
dc.date.accessioned 2017-01-31T01:26:55Z
dc.date.available 2017-01-31T01:26:55Z
dc.identifier Física de la Tierra 2005, 17, 33-45
dc.identifier 0214-4557 (Print)
dc.identifier 1988-2440 (Online)
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10261/4489
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/10261/4489
dc.description The three Begur experiments have been conducted on March, 16-19, 1999, which was the first altimeter calibration ever developed in Spain and the first Alt-B altimeter calibration made in the Mediterranean Sea; on July, 4-7, 2000, and on August, 25-28, 2002. Direct absolute altimeter calibration, estimating the TOPEX Alt-B bias, was made from direct overflights using GPS buoys. This method does not require any modelling of geoid and tidal error. Other main objective of the campaigns was to map with GPS buoys the Mean Sea Surface, MSS, along an ascending T/P groundtrack about 15-20 km from the coast, using coastal tide gauge measurements. This method requires geographical mapping of geoid and ocean tides which reduces the accuracy of the bias estimate by a factor of two. Indirect absolute altimeter calibration is possible for any satellite crossing the MSS, with the only requirement that tide gauges are operational during the overflight. In the framework of the JASON-1 CNES/NASA mission, a campaign was conducted on June 9-17, 2003, in the Absolute Calibration Site of the Island of Ibiza. The objective was to determine the local marine geoid slope under the ascending (187) and descending (248) Jason-1 ground tracks, in order to allow a better extrapolation of the open-ocean altimetric data with on-shore tide gauge locations, and thereby improve the overall precision of the calibration process. We present preliminary results on Jason-1 altimeter calibration using the derived marine geoid: from this analysis the altimeter bias is estimated to be 120 ± 5 mm.
dc.description These campaigns have been supported by the Spanish Government, Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología CICYT R+D Projects in Space Research Ref.: ESP97-1816-CO4 and ESP2001-4534-PE. GPS (SANB) and tide gauge data from Ibiza and San Antonio were obtained also within the framework of the ESEAS-RI EU project under contract EVR1-CT-2002-40025.
dc.description Peer reviewed
dc.format 487221 bytes
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language eng
dc.publisher Universidad Complutense de Madrid
dc.rights openAccess
dc.subject Altimetry
dc.subject Calibration
dc.subject Geoid
dc.subject GPS
dc.subject Tide gauges
dc.subject GPS Buoys
dc.subject Catamaran
dc.title Calibration Altimeter Sites at Cape of Begur and Ibiza Island
dc.type Artículo


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