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Mapping soil moisture and ocean salinity
There are currently relatively few global datasets on either soil moisture or ocean salinity. However, this information is urgently needed to improve our knowledge of the global water cycle and help understand more about how a changing climate may be affecting patterns of evaporation over the land and ocean. SMOS will fill this gap by providing a global image of surface-soil moisture every three days. This information, along with numerical modelling techniques, will result in a better estimation of the water content in soil down to a depth of 1-2 m, which is referred to as the ‘root zone’.
Estimation of soil moisture in the root zone is important for improving short- and medium-term meteorological forecasting, hydrological modelling, monitoring photosynthesis and plant growth, and estimating the terrestrial carbon cycle. Timely estimates of soil moisture are also important for contributing to the forecasting of hazardous events such as floods, droughts and heat waves.
Ocean circulation plays an important role moderating the climate by, for example, transporting heat from the equator to the poles. Consequently, data on sea-surface salinity will improve our understanding of the conditions that influence global ocean circulation and thus climate. SMOS will provide:
Last update: 28 September 2009
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