INVESTIGATION OF OYASHIO-KUROSHIO FRONTAL ZONE USING ALOS PALSAR IMAGES AND ANCILLARY INFORMATION...
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Transcript of INVESTIGATION OF OYASHIO-KUROSHIO FRONTAL ZONE USING ALOS PALSAR IMAGES AND ANCILLARY INFORMATION...
INVESTIGATION OF OYASHIO-KUROSHIO FRONTAL ZONE USING ALOS PALSAR
IMAGES AND ANCILLARY INFORMATION
Leonid M. Mitnik and Vyacheslav B. Lobanov
V.I. Il'ichev Pacific Oceanological Institute FEB RAS, 43 Baltiyskaya St., Vladivostok 690041, Russian Federation, e-mail:
IGARSS 201124-20 July, Vancouver, Canada
2011 IEEE InternationalGeoscience and Remote Sensing
Symposium
Authors thank JAXA for ALOS PALSAR images provided for projects № 354 и 365.
Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zoneThe Kuroshio and Oyashio, which are the western boundary currents, have great influence on climate in the western North Pacific. The Kuroshio and the Oyashio meet in the Pacific ocean east of Japan and a complex oceanic feature associated with warm and cold eddies appears in this region. Therefore, the Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone is sometime called "the confluence zone”. Oyashio water has low temperature, low salinity and is rich in nutrients compared with subtropical water. Since the large temperature difference between the Kuroshio and Oyashio waters, there appear many temperature fronts and eddies of various scales. This region is also well known as one of the good commercial fish grounds in the World ocean.
Seasonal and interannual dynamics of the Oyashio and Kuroshio are closely linked to climate change and influence the migrations and fluctuations of fishes in the northwestern Pacific.
Kuroshio-OyashioThe eddies may persist in this region for periods ranging from several months to more than one year, and their occurrence and physical and biological evolution have a strong influence on the local climate, hydrography, and fisheries (Sugimoto and Tameishi, 1992; Yasuda et al., 1992). The occurrence and behavior of these mesoscale eddies are known to be related to both bottom topography and variability in currents They are monitored mainly via hydrography, satellite infrared images, and altimetry data.
.
While heat transport can occur by both warm and cold eddies and noneddy fluctuations, significant material transport only occurs via the movement of intense eddies that trap water within their core. Long-distance poleward movements of intense Warm Core Rings along the trenches play an important role in the exchange of salinity and nutrients between the subtropical and western subarctic gyres.
Geography and hydrography of the study region
(a) Bottom topography (from Smith and Sandwell ,1997), (b) magnitude of mean geostrophic velocity (color scale) and mean dynamic height with 1500-db reference [gray contours in m; (Rio and Hernandez, 2000). Front lines (defined as bands of relatively strong mean geostrophic flows, denoted as the Subarctic Front (SAF) and the subarctic boundary (SAB) are represented by black dashed lines.
Schematic summary of the main hydrographic features of the Kuroshio-Oyashio Extension Region
S. Itoh and I. Yasuda, Characteristics of mesoscale eddies in the Kuroshio–Oyashio Extension Region detected from the distribution of the Sea Surface Height Anomaly, J. Phys. Oceanography, 2010, vol. 40, 1018-1034.
OY: Oyashio current, OYI: southward intrusion of the Oyashio, WCR: warm-core ring, CCR: cold-core ring, CWA: coldwater area, KE: Kuroshio Extension, KBF: Kuroshio bifurcation front, TWC: Tsugaru Warm Current.
Schematic summary of the behavior of mesoscale eddies in the Kuroshio-Oyashio Extension Region
WCR, CCR, KE, SAF, SAB, and TWC represent warm-core ring, cold core ring, the Kuroshio Extension, Subarctic Front, subarctic boundary, and the Tsugaru Warm Current, respectively. (Itoh and Yasuda, 2010).
Thin dashed arrows indicate movement directions. Flows of the Oyashio and the KE, the SAF, and the SAB are shown by solid gray lines; the deepest part of the Japan and Kuril–Kamchatka Trenches is depicted by a dashed gray line.
Pacific saury migration roots
Kuroshio front
Oyashio subarctic front
Thermal front in the transition zone
N. Ishiko, H. Kiyofuji and S.-i. Saito, Relationship between Pacific saury fishing grounds and the Oyashio front in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean
Hokkaido
Itoh ,Yasuda, and Ueno, PICES, 2010
ALOSALOSwas launched on January was launched on January 20062006
PALOS PALSAR
Regime Fine ScanSAR PolarimetricPolarization HH, HV HH + HV
VV+VHHH, VV HH + HV + VV +
VHIncident angle 8 - 60 ° 18 - 43 ° 8 - 30 °
Pixel size, m 7 - 44 14 - 88 100 24 - 89
Swath width, km
40 - 70 40 - 70 250 - 350 20 - 65
PALSAR characteristics
PALSAR operates at wavelengh of 23.6 cm
Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone
Mitnik L.M. and V.B. Lobanov (1991), Reflection of oceanic fronts on satellite radar images, Oceanography of Asian Marginal Seas, Kenzo Takano, Ed., Amsterdam, Elsevier, pp. 85-101.
Hokkaido
Hokkaido
Hon
sh
u
NOAA-10 AVHRR infrared image acquired on 30 April 1987 (left) and Kosmos-1500 Real Aperture Radar image
Warm eddy
Cold Oyashio water
Distance, km
Te
mp
era
ture
Resolution 1-2 km
Hokkaido
1
3
2
1
3
2
Kuroshio-Oyashio and synoptic eddies Okean-7 X-band Real Aperture Radar (RAR) and NOAA AVHRR-derived SST. 20 November 1999.
White rectangle marks the boundaries of RAR image.
Wind speed to the south of Kuril Islands was 5-6 m/s. Anticyclonic eddy 1, warm Kuroshio waters 2 and cold Oyashio waters 2 are revealed due to high radar contrast.Fine details of SST field (such as warm streamer 4 and others) are clearly depicted on the RAR image. SST contrasts reach 12°C
at the eddy boundary.
Kuril Islands
Kuril Is
lands
Okhotsk Sea Okhotsk Sea
4 4
460 km
Resolution 1-2 km
Eddy on ERS-1 image
The imaged area lies just east of the Tsugaru Strait separating the Hokkaido and Honshu Islands in the Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone. The transition zone exhibits strong mesoscale variability. This variability in the current system manifests itself in mesoscale meanders and eddies, which are generated in the frontal zone by instabilities.
23-Dec-1994 01:08 UTC
Warm anticyclo-nic eddy in the Pacific Ocean generated by the Kuroshio Current.
Hokkaido
Ho
nsh
u
100 km
Pixel size 25 x 25 m
Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone. 18 April 2006
(а) ALOS PALSAR image
(b) NGSST map derived with MODIS, AVHRR and AMSR-E data
(в) QuikSCAT-derived wind field
(а)
(b) (c)
Ho
nsh
u
Sea surface temperature Sea surface wind speed
ALOS PALSAR. Anticyclonic eddy
(а) (б) (в) (б)
290 км
(a) (b)
PALSAR image acquired on 18 April 2009 at 01:10 UTC; (b) sea surface temperature map for the same day submitted by Fishery Research Association. Red rectangle marks the PALSAR image boundaries.
5
6
HonshuHonshu
Hokkaido4
3
1
ALOS PALSAR. Anticyclonic eddy(а) (б) (в) (б)
290 км
(a) (b)
5
6
HonshuHonshu
Hokkaido4
3
1
PALSAR image acquired on 18 April 2009 at 01:10 UTC; (b) sea surface temperature map for the same day submitted by Fishery Research Association. Red rectangle marks the boundaries of PALSAR image. 1 – warm waters, 2- cold waters , 3 – warm streamer, 4-6 and 5 – cold small eddies, 6 – warm small eddy.
2
Aqua MODIS. 19 April 2009, 03:40 UTC
(c) (d)
5
5
6 6
Honshu
Honshu
Hokkaido
4
4
(c) Infrared image (31-st channel) and (d) chl-a field
2
23
3
11
1 – warm waters, 2- cold waters , 3 – warm streamer, 4 and 5 – cold small eddies, 6 – warm small eddy. Red dotted rectangle marks the boundaries of PALSAR image.
IIII
Hon
sh
uH
on
sh
u
HokkaidHokkaidoo
II II
II
(а) ALOS PALSAR image in ScanSAR mode. 18 April, 01:10 UTC.
(b) METOP ASCAT-derived wind field.
Fragments I and II. 1: warm eddy, 2: cold waters, 3: warm streamer.Fragment III: cold eddy 4
(а)
(b)
11
22
33
11
22
III 33
22
11
1122
44
(а) NOAA AVHRR infrared images acquired on 19 April(b) SST for 18 April, Fishery Research Association (Japan)(c) Aqua MODIS chl-a concentration for 19 April at 03:35 UTCRed dotted rectangle marks the boundaries of PALSAR image.
Transition zone Kuroshio-Oyashio. 18 -19 April 2009
(а)
(b)
(c)
1300 km
1
3
1
2
Honsh
u
24
44
ALOS PALSAR18 April 2009 at
01:10 UTC
Fragment III. Spiral anticyclonic eddy 4
Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone 4-5 May 2010
(а) NOAA AVHRR infrared image taken on 4 May (b) Agua MODIS-derived SST, 4 May. (c) NGSST, retrieved with Aqua MODIS, NOAA AVHRR and Aqua AMSR-E data for 5 May. Red dotted rectangles mark the boundaries of PALSAR image.
(а) (b)
(c)
CloudsHonsh
uHokkaido
Hon
shu
Hon
shu
25 km
Terra MODIS visible image. 5 May 2010, 01:25 UTC.
boundaries of PALSAR image
sun glint area
Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone on 5 May 2010146°20‘E 146°40‘E
40°20‘N
40°00‘N
39°40‘N
39°20‘N
Terra MODISTerra MODIS 01:25 Гр. 01:25 Гр.
50 км
70 km
Hokkaido
(а)(b) (c)
(a) ALOS PALSAR image at 00:49 UTC in Fine beam mode (pixel size is 14 m),
(b) Terra MODIS infrared (31-st channel) image at 01:25 UTC and
(c) MetOp ASCAT-derived wind field at 11:55 UTC. Red rectangles mark the PALSAR image boundaries.
Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone. 5 May 2010
70 km
21 1
1
2
23
3
3
44
5
5
6
6
Hokkaido
142E 146E 150E
(a) (b) (c)
(a) ALOS PALSAR image at 00:49 UTC in Fine beam mode (pixel size is 14 m) and Terra MODIS (b) infrared (31-st channel) and (c) visible images at 01:25 UTC. Red dotted rectangles mark the PALSAR image boundaries. 1 - warm anticyclonic eddy, the size of ≈30 km; 2 - warm streamer; 3 - warm eddy. High correlation between the infrared (SST) and visible (Chl-a) images is observed within the broader sun glint area far beyond the PALSAR image boundaries, in particular, for warm eddies 4 and 5, cold streamer 6 and other features.
Hon
shu
50 km
500 m
2 km
Gra
y level
м
AA
AA
Alternating bands of calm (dark) and roughened (gray) water caused SST variations or roll convection in the boundary layer of the atmosphere. Band width is approximately 300-500 m.
Radar contrasts in a tail of anticyclonic eddy
Conclusions1. Structure of the Kuroshio-Oyashio transition zone is revealed on
satellite radar images obtained at X, C and L-bands (Kosmos RAR, ERS-1/2, Envisat, ALOS), on infrared and visible images obtained by various sensors (MODIS, AVHRR, …).
2. Warm eddies are characterized by the lower values of chl-a concentration and increased values of the NRCS against the surrounding colder waters. SST contrasts of these eddies can reach 6-8 and more Celsius. Chl-a concentration in cold Oyashio waters can reach 1 mg/m3 and more.
3. Variations in ocean color and in the sea surface roughness are responsible for eddy detection on visible images in sun glint and surrounding areas.
4. Relationship between NRCS and the SST can be explained by the variations in stability of the air flow above the sea surface caused by changes in SST, the close connection between surface film concentration and SST field, the changes of relative wind speed over the moving waters, and other factors (dependence of water viscosity on the SST, etc). The determination of the relative contribution of each of above mechanisms in radar contrast formation at various wavelength and polarizations is a complicated problem and requires special satellite and ground truth experiments.