How salty the sea surface is, 8-day average (SMAP, RSS version)
What it measures. How salty the ocean surface is, shown as a rolling 8-day average across the globe.
How it's made. Produced by Remote Sensing Systems from NASA's SMAP satellite radio measurements, with wind data folded in to account for how surface roughness affects the readings, then smoothed into 8-day maps.
How & where you'd use it. Helps researchers follow shorter-term shifts in sea surface saltiness, useful for studying ocean circulation, the water cycle, and freshwater spreading from rivers and rain. This is an evaluation release, meant as a stand-in until the fully validated version is ready.
What's measured
Coverage & cadence
- Time span2015-03-27 → 2024-01-05
- Measured bySMAP (SMAP L-BAND RADIOMETER)
- Processing levelLevel 3
- Spatial extent-180, -90, 180, 90
- FormatsnetCDF-4
- StatusCOMPLETE
What you can do with it
- Watch sea-surface temperature and marine heatwaves
- Spot algal blooms and ocean-colour shifts
- Support fisheries and coastal monitoring
Official description
The RSS SMAP Level 3 Sea Surface Salinity Standard Mapped Image 8-Day Running Mean V5.3 Evaluation Dataset produced by the Remote Sensing Systems (RSS) and sponsored by the NASA Ocean Salinity Science Team, is a evaluation product that provides orbital/swath data on sea surface salinity (SSS) derived from the NASA's Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission. The SMAP satellite was launched on 31 January 2015 with a near-polar orbit at an inclination of 98 degrees and an altitude of 685 km. It has an ascending node time of 6 pm and is sun-synchronous. With its 1000km swath, SMAP achieves global coverage in approximately 3 days, but has an exact orbit repeat cycle of 8 days. Malfunction of the SMAP scatterometer on 7 July, 2015, has necessitated the use of collocated wind speed, primarily from WindSat, for the surface roughness correction required for the surface salinity retrieval. The evaluation Version 5.3 is identical to the Version 6.0 validated release with the exception that Version 5.3 uses the Version 5 L1B antenna temperatures (TA) as input. The V6 L1B TA uses a lower TA threshold for RFI exclusion. Until the full back-processing of V6.0 is complete, the evaluation Version 5.3 can and should be used instead. Version 5.3 has been processed from the beginning of the SMAP mission to the end of 2023, and each data file is available in netCDF-4 file format. Observations are global in extent with an approximate spatial resolution of 40KM. Note that while a SSS 40KM variable is also included in the product for most open ocean applications, The standard product of the SMAP Version 5.3 release is the smoothed salinity product with a spatial resolution of approximately 70 km. This activity was informed by the Satellite Needs Working Group (SNWG), an interagency effort of the U.S. Government dedicated to identifying and addressing Earth observation needs across U.S. civilian federal agencies.
Get the data
import earthaccess
earthaccess.login(strategy="netrc") # free Earthdata Login
results = earthaccess.search_data(
short_name="SMAP_RSS_L3_SSS_SMI_8DAY-RUNNINGMEAN_V5.3",
version="5.3",
bounding_box=(-122.5, 37.2, -121.8, 37.9), # your area (W,S,E,N)
temporal=("2024-01-01", "2024-12-31"), # your dates
)
files = earthaccess.open(results) # stream straight from POCLOUD Browsing CMR needs no login. Downloading or streaming bytes needs a free Earthdata Login + the earthaccess package. Official links
- Data Use and Citation Guidelines VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- ATBD, Validation Analysis, Product Specifications, etc VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- NASA SMAP Mission Website VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Remote Sensing Systems SMAP Sea Surface Salinity Website VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Know issues README VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- SMAP-SSS Project and Instrument Overview VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Dynamically updated RSS webpage listing L2 files with missing ancillary inputs VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
- Dynamically updated RSS webpage listing L2 files with Bad Orbits VIEW RELATED INFORMATION