Nowadays, Sentinel-1 (S-1) synthetic aperture radars (SARs) operating in wave mode and the real aperture radar (RAR) called Surface Waves Investigation and Monitoring (SWIM) onboard the China-France Oceanography SATellite (CFOSAT)… Click to show full abstract
Nowadays, Sentinel-1 (S-1) synthetic aperture radars (SARs) operating in wave mode and the real aperture radar (RAR) called Surface Waves Investigation and Monitoring (SWIM) onboard the China-France Oceanography SATellite (CFOSAT) are the only two kinds of spaceborne radars providing directional ocean wave information globally. To quantify the absolute uncertainties in the swell wave heights of a specific wave system (Hss) observed from these two spaceborne sensors, a triple colocation error model is exploited via WaveWatch III (WW3) wave model hindcasts for the first time. After implementing spatiotemporal collocation, cross-assigning swell partitions, and rejecting suspicious data, a database of the optimal-matched Hss triplets (S-1, SWIM, and WW3) is determined over a one-year period (June 2020–June 2021). Qualitatively, traditional dual intercomparisons indicate the inconsistency between the Hss from both SAR and RAR radars in terms of systematic biases. Furthermore, the triple collocated error analysis quantitatively reveals that, at a global scale, SWIM onboard CFOSAT has the least uncertainty in Hss [~0.2-m root mean square error (RMSE) and ~11% scatter index (SI)] compared with S-1 SAR (0.35–0.50-m RMSE and 17%–26% SI depending on incidence modes) and WW3, under the assumption that the random errors of the three data sources are independent, indicating that the newly launched SWIM instrument is an invaluable resource of directional wave information for the scientific community. The results are discussed with respect to regional error characteristics along with a feasible explanation of error sources. The findings could be helpful for better understanding and synergistically exploiting the Hss datasets from these two spaceborne radars.
               
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