Resolving mass flux at high spatial and temporal resolution using GRACE intersatellite measurements

D. D. Rowlands, S. B. Luthcke, S. M. Klosko, F. G. R. Lemoine, D. S. Chinn, J. J. McCarthy, C. M. Cox, Ole Baltazar Andersen

    Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    The GRACE mission is designed to monitor mass flux on the Earth's surface at one month and high spatial resolution through the estimation of monthly gravity fields. Although this approach has been largely successful, information at submonthly time scales can be lost or even aliased through the estimation of static monthly parameters. Through an analysis of the GRACE data residuals, we show that the fundamental temporal and spatial resolution of the GRACE data is 10 days and 400 km. We present an approach similar in concept to altimetric methods that recovers submonthly mass flux at a high spatial resolution. Using 4° × 4° blocks at 10-day intervals, we estimate the mass of surplus or deficit water over a 52° × 60° grid centered on the Amazon basin for July 2003. We demonstrate that the recovered signals are coherent and correlate well with the expected hydrological signal.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalGeophysical Research Letters
    Volume32
    Issue number4
    ISSN0094-8276
    Publication statusPublished - 2005

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